Learn But Don't Stay - Human Resources and Payroll Specialist ADP Employee Review

1.0
Apr 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A company to learn skills but after a year or maybe 2 be ready to move on.

Cons

Low pay for the amount of work you do. Not a company you want stay too long as they will lay you off after you return from leave. If you are the type of employee that just want to work, collect your pay, and go home you will not fit in. You must be an employee that wants to entertain after work events, join clubs with the company, have potlucks basically k-12 school all over again. Yes there is micromanaging. If you are new and still learning the system you will get attitude when you need help.

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ADP Response
3w
Thank you for bringing these situations to our attention and we are sorry to hear about this experience. We appreciate your feedback and advice and we would like to hear more about your specific situation so that we can review your concern completely. Please contact our Associate Relations team at 1-877-878-4811 or hr.associate.relations@adp.com

Explore other reviews about ADP

5.0
Jun 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Uncapped commission and great freedom

Cons

It’s a grind but worth it

2.0
Jun 15, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Established company with a long history and relatively stable business operations. - Provides a sense of job stability compared to many organizations navigating rapid changes in the current AI-driven market. - Lower risk of frequent restructuring or large-scale layoffs than many high-growth technology companies. - Opportunity to work with experienced employees who have deep institutional and domain knowledge. - Predictable work environment that may appeal to individuals seeking long-term stability over rapid change. - Strong choice for professionals who value job security and a steady career path in an uncertain economic climate.

Cons

- Documentation is limited or rusted, and many operational processes lack clear runbooks or standardized procedures, making onboarding and troubleshooting more difficult than necessary. - If you're coming from a modern, fast-paced engineering environment, the organization may feel behind current industry practices and tooling. - Internal politics can sometimes outweigh technical merit or execution. - There are teams with very long-tenured employees where change and innovation can be difficult to drive. - Decision-making often involves multiple layers of approval, resulting in significant bureaucracy and slower execution. - Processes can move slowly, and collaboration is not always transparent across teams, leading to inefficiencies and occasional confusion around ownership. - In some areas, roles, responsibilities, and operational processes are not clearly defined, creating unnecessary chaos and inconsistent ways of working. - Engineering standards and best practices vary considerably between teams, making cross-team collaboration challenging. - Organizational change tends to happen slowly, which can be frustrating for employees who are focused on modernization, automation, and continuous improvement.

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