Not everyone can do this job. - Telemarketing InfoCision Employee Review

2.0
Jun 29, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This company does have good new employee training. You get to choose your days off. Will not ask you to do overtime. You get to work 40 hours if you want. You get paid weekly and pretty decent money too.

Cons

You have to lie to old people to get them to donate time and money. You are on the phone for hours upon hours with little time in between each call. There is computer dialing for you so you cannot control how fast they come and who you are calling. Which means you have very little time to even breath and think between calls. You need to ask for permission to go the bathroom and then get docked pay if you take over a certain time and that is up to the direct supervisor. This job comes with a lot of boredom. No cell phones or magazines or even books allowed in the calling center. So all you do is sit and do calls. There is a lot of people who come and go from the job because its such a bad job. Rules change constantly.

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1.0
Jul 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The benefit of working from home

Cons

Work from home; spend paychecks on therapy. Once COVID began, we had the benefit of working from home; though not before we had 'training' to operate the systems from home. Our 'training' was supposed to be nearly a week, but at the literal last moment it was decided that training would be cut to five hours and then we were sent off like birds from a nest. Even working from home had its issues and my mental health suffered from it. We had minimal breaks allowed without counseling or reprimand for stepping away for too long. (Anything over 4 minutes was too long.) Anytime a question or issue arose; good luck trying to reach a supervisor or manager for an answer, and your co-workers were too overworked and overwhelmed with call flow. You didn't have time to breath half the time. For handling calls, it's common to finish a call and the SECOND you hang up, the audio would glitch out because the next call was coming in so abruptly. We were not allowed to put even a 10 second wait time in the systems to 'woo-sah' into the next call after dealing with angry customers but still having to upsell, upsell, UPSELL. If you don't upsell---Couseling, reprimand. Chats and emails; you'd think it'd be less stressful but no. It was common for me to be operating three to four chats simultaneously, and if a chat is left unanswered or left on read for longer than 30 seconds, we had a supervisor 'checking in', which was their polite way of rushing us along and tended to lead to mistakes being made. Such as giving the wrong information to the wrong chat customer. On the rare day that it was calm with only one or two chats, we had to juggle emails into the flow if customers took too long. When I joined infocision, which most of the workers I worked with called it 'info-prison'; we were honestly told 'For upselling; keep pushing until they say 'no'. If they say they aren't sure, if they don't know they can afford it, anything that isn't a firm 'no', keep pushing'...It's a certain type of soul damaging to have to be on a call with a single mother during COVID who is sobbing to me that she needs a basic package for her children to do homeschooling, and instead of getting to be a decent human and apologize for her struggles, I had a supervisor motioning me along to encourage her to upgrade to the next best package to ensure her children had the best connection during their quarantine... Needless to say, if you'd like to learn how to be a boundary pusher, spend all your paychecks on therapy or anti-stress medications and want to do so while earning minimum wage that will go up in increments of $0.25 each year, then this job is for you!

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