Great work, frustrating company to work for - Hotel Service Division Encore Global Employee Review

1.0
Sep 10, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

PSAV is one of, if not the, largest AV and event services providers in North America. There are over 600 locations scattered across the country, and partnerships agreements have been signed with many of the best hotels and convention centers in the world. Many of these location are highly desirable places to work, and with so many of them, there are almost always job openings at all the various levels of the organization. Advancement within the organization does happen, and a technician over time can rise to a position in senior management, particularly if they are willing to move around. The work itself can be rewarding and extremely interesting. There are many opportunities to provide services to some of the largest corporations in the world, and to work a variety of events. Creativity is strongly encourage, and employees are given a great deal of personal empowerment. During a very difficult recession, particularly for the hotel business, the company has managed to keep itself together finically, which is commendable given the economy we are in. While it varies from position and region, the work does generally pay well, be it hourly or salary. It is at least competitive pay. The company does offer benefits like a good a healthcare plan, paid vacation and other benefits. Though I have rated it poorly and listed a number of bad things about the company here, on the whole the company continues to improve itself and gets better at what it does year after year.

Cons

PSAV’s size is both a blessing and a curse. A successful freelance producer and former employee I once worked with called it the “McDonalds of the AV business” The analogy has a lot of truth to it. With so many locations spread out so far it is difficult to maintain consistency across the brand. There is very little support from the cooperate management for those operating in the field. The company utilizes an internally develop software application for managing location billing, inventory, sales operations, etc. that is horribly and disturbingly inefficient. Many of the top sales people in the company simply (and wisely) refuse to use it for generating quotes, instead coming up with their own templates. But not all locations have those resources to dedicate entirely to sales, and everything eventually has to be entered into the software anyways, leading to double and triple entires into a system that generates confusing invoices both for clients and hotel partners alike. Sadly, a director who might be better serving the company with their technical knowledge, sales, or services skills, will be spending the bulk of their hours doing overly redundant data entry on this horrible system. HR is non existent. It’s as if we do not have an HR department, seriously. Beyond recruiting, I have no idea what they do. If acknolgement and feedback are important to you in your work you will not like working for PSAV, because you will not get any. PSAV is Sale driven company. The prevailing attitude with the upper management and throughout the origination is “sell it first, and then go find the people and gear”. I’m not saying that this is a bad approach, in many ways it makes a lot of sense. But what we are selling is technically and logistically challenging, and I am not personally comfortably selling something unless I feel confident in our ability to execute. PSAV can and does successfully execute technically challenging events all over the country every single day. But there is very little consistency across the brand, because there is no emphasis on quality control, and very little on operational logistics. All of the emphasis is instead on sales. There is also an over abundant use of unscrupulous sales tactics that lack any integrity. Operations are terrible, there is so little inventory control. There are regional asset mangers, but I’ve never met one and have no idea what they do. They do not actively mange the regions assets, which is frustrating considering how much equipment we have. Our horrific inventory control bureaucracy only makes it things harder. Cooperate makes decisions about the inventory using the information the internal software generates, but the software is terrible and not giving them a clear picture of what is happening, no one uses it anymore than is absolutely necessary. The “garbage in, garbage out” principle very much applies here. If you become a director you will be put at a hotel and told to do whatever it takes to keep the hotel happy. Well what makes the hotels happy is when you agree to doing events for free, or events at ridiculous discounts. Push back too much against this, and your hotel will simply complain to your RVP that you are not doing your job, and you will be replaced. No servant can serve two masters, and replacing directors who have found themselves in this exact position is how I have advanced my career, by valuing the hotels satisfaction over the profitability of the business. But the hotels will never be satisfied, and will instead use this position to exploit us and cut their own operational cost.There is a bureaucracy to try and prevent this, but it is burdensome and does not go far enough. What happens is there is a large grey area of favors, and it creates tremendous amount of stress, and a significant loss of profitability. The scenario plays out differently at each location, but I have yet to work somewhere where this wasn’t a significant problem. It is also a problem that is not unique to our company but our industry as a whole. There are other divisions besides hotel services, but I could not say to much about any of them, as the divisions rarely work together. Corporate tries hard to “bring down the silos”, changing division names and such, and while they have made some progress, there is still a long way to go. Many of the other divisions maintain a superior attitude towards the hotel services division and look down on it, particularly nation sales. With so much of the gear being sub-rented, so many of the high end technicians being freelance, and the lions share of the profit going to the hotels in the form of commission, it’s hard to understand how or why PSAV even exist. People who are passionate about the AV business, or just want to do the best possible work they can for their clients, would be better off working independently or with another company.

Explore other reviews about Encore Global

5.0
May 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice team, cool events and good benefits

Cons

Pay and hours are hard to come by

3.0
Jul 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It's about as stable as it gets for events AV, especially in a bigger market where you can range further from your home location for hours. They have training and that is applied to what shifts you can access: more training = more shifts. You can pick up shifts beyond what your management schedules inside the work app on the 'yellow tab'. All disciplines are available, from rigging to audio to video to lighting etc. It's a huge corporation, so they have a massive resource pool to pull from for training and gear. Given enough time, if sales can sell it they can source it. Great first step before going on tour or becoming some kind of operator or specialist for more pay elsewhere. Many of the directors are competent and don't foster a toxic environment. Some clients are amazing and good people and a joy to work with.

Cons

It's a huge corporation. Everything is SOPs and rigid. Salaried positions get worked to the bone for a slightly higher slow-period-proof compensation. Roles are rigid: as you advance, if you're on a supervisory path you rarely get to operate and are expected to move to management of some sort. Pay is looooow compared to the rest of the industry. You'll do better than someone at Target, but not by much, starting out. They have a tech roundtable with RVPs that is supposed to make us feel heard but little is ever done. Honestly every markets techs needs to follow San Diego's lead and unionize. Yearly raises are a joke. The only way to get ahead is to study and work hard and make friends with managers and PMs, then lateral into other positions as they come open. Hours are pegged to billable hours: no client, no hours. Schedules are absolutely random and you will never know more than two weeks in advance. Which is interesting given that you can't schedule PTO less than two weeks in advance, so you can't use PTO to cover shortfalls in their ability to keep you fed. This is the main way they lose good techs to their competition. That and toxic work environments. HR is entirely on the company's side and absolutely rigid, and they work at a snails pace. Document anything that seems sketchy, and get everything in writing from your managers if you can, even if just text, otherwise they can say you acted unilaterally and HR you at a whim. The operational doctrine is that of a Taco Bell manager: hire disposable neck-down entry level labor at low pay, use supervisors and maybe one skilled tech to get things done at minimal cost. Usually it works, but at the cost of burned out techs. Usually. Get the wrong manager and they'll be squeezing this even more to make their P+L look good and get a bigger bonus off your sweat. We're the most expensive AV option, because we split with the hotel, so you're already dealing with clients that expect top flight service for that money. Most of our gear is aging out, and some managers do little to nothing to get replacements because that will hurt their P+L. Capex is whatever the company in its wisdom says it is: you get what they send. Usually it's what you need. Usually. They do a yearly work satisfaction survey, and allegedly get glowing marks. I doubt that's real.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All