Fragomen reviews

3.4

52% would recommend to a friend

(2,192 total reviews)
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Austin T. Fragomen

65% approve of CEO

40% positive business outlook

Fragomen has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 2,192 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Fragomen employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Legal industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
Apr 3, 2021

Don't work here

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The benefits, weekly bagels, and the Christmas Party

Cons

Literally everything else. The people are cruel, the supervising paralegals are incompetent and not helpful. They tell you that we're a family (which is code for "We're going to ask you to work a lot"). They don't care about any of their employees. They hire people with potential, but no background in immigration law. They say that they want to foster an environment where you can ask questions, learn, and establish a career. I was frequently belittled by both my supervisor and the attorneys that I worked with for asking questions to clarify things. There was always a disconnect between the advice that I would get from the attorney and my supervisor. They would tell me things that would be right in the exact circumstance in which I asked the question, but then I would try to apply their directions in another situation and it was wrong. There are many elements to the job that are client specific, such as formatting of support letters and other documentation. Management expected you to know years of client preferences immediately. The partners couldn't care less about creating a positive work environment. The turnover is incredible. Save yourself a great deal of anxiety and stress and don't ever work here.

3.0
Jul 15, 2020

More cons than pros

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Your experience at Fragomen is very dependent on which Partner's team they place you. Overall, the pros are: 1. There is competitive pay for the position if you stay in the role over time. 2. Some teams let you set your own work hours, so that is a plus especially if you have children or a second job. My team personally has restrictions on this so it varies from team to team. 3. You don't have to come from an immigration background to get this job, and most of your training is on the job. There is a downside to that I will explain. 4. Before telecommuting for coronavirus, we had a decent office space, and you can move from a cubicle to a shared office space in a pretty short time. 5. Dress code is pretty relaxed and we don't have to meet with clients in the office since most of them are out of state.

Cons

Sadly, the cons to working at Fragomen outweigh the pros. 1. No Training Like I said earlier, you don't need immigration experience to start working as an AP1, but the training experience to learn what you need to know is stressful because there is no process. Every person is assigned a "mentor" and "trainer" when they start, but most of us end up getting assigned cases we have no experience with and just have to figure it out on our own. This can be really stressful because we are dealing with people's visas and jobs. Depending on your team, there is little or no oversight on your cases, so sometimes mistakes aren't noticed until months after things have been filed. The worst part is, even though our work is supposed to be reviewed at every stage of the process by attorneys and senior managers with decades of experience, mistakes are always blamed on the AP1. 2. Terrible Communication Once you survive the "training" at Fragomen, you start to realize how sad the communication skills are in the office. We've had monthly and weekly meetings about "standardization," but every team still does things a different way anyway. This is partly due to the lack of leadership of some of the Partners, since most seem to be incommunicado. There are so many people who have met the wrath of the partners when you don't meet their unreasonable expectations and ended up leaving because of the stress. Fragomen hires brand new college graduates, but then expects them to have zero mistakes and know the ins and outs of immigration in a few months. Then there a some people who will actually help you but they're so overworked that they're working 50-60 hours a week just to keep up with the workload. The other side of the terrible communication coin is that people are downright belittling to you if something is not going their way. These people have never learned how to manage a team of people, or how to treat your employees with respect, or how to care about their employees unless its about how many filings your team is getting done aka how much money you're making them. Some managers are very rude and have said sexist things in the middle of meetings where all the partners are, and no one says anything. 3. Mishandling Coronavirus If you asked the partners, they would probably give themselves a pat on the back for how they handled the coronavirus situation in our office. In reality, the partners continued to put employees lives at risk well after the state of emergency in Atlanta and even after there were several reports of a couple people possibly being exposed and coming into the office. Luckily, most people do not have to be in the office now, but the partners won't give us any idea of what their plan is and there are still people who have to go into the office. Many partners don't wear any protective gear when they are in the office. 4. Moving Offices Earlier this year, the partners announced that we would be moving a to a new office. Currently, AP1s all have a spacious individual cubicle with three desk tables, our own printer, and a storage cabinet. We can have 50-90 cases at any given time and the files for these cases are required, so we need a lot of storage space to work and to keep files. After some time, APs are moved to a shared office, where we share an office space with another AP, and we have our own bookshelf and can have calls with clients and foreign nationals with our doors closed since we have a lot more calls. The new office is laughable and just proves how the partners don't have any idea (or don't care) of what we do as APs. The partners decided that anyone who is not a manager will be stuck into a shared cubicle that is smaller than the individual cubicles we had. So, instead of having a private space for being on calls, storage space for all of our files, we will be right behind someone else with one third of the storage space and one little locker for our things. Additionally, we will no longer have our own printers, and even though we go through hundreds of sheets of paper for our filings, we'll have to spend half the workday getting up to go wait on a shared printer. There was no opportunity for feedback. 5. Sexism and Racism in the office I admit that I didn't always realize the sexist and racist things that happen around the office, but it is so obvious at Fragomen that after two years of being here it gets to you. HR is useless since they bow down to the partners. Not to mention that there are people who have worked here for years sating racist and sexist things that the partners know about but there are no consequences here unless you make a mistake on a H-1B filing. Lesson of the story is Fragomen is fine for a few months, but don't come here for a long term career unless you can take the constant belittling and rudeness from managers because HR will not protect you if you say something against it.

1.0
Jan 22, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good place to learn... if you are a quick learner. - Generous PTO benefits. - Depending on your team placement, you may have the opportunity to work with an experienced paralegal who will take the time to train you effectively.

Cons

- If you show any initiative/work ethic at all, they will throw a backbreaking amount of work on you. - The employee turnover rate is so high, you are constantly picking up cases that someone started, and have no idea where it might be in the process. - No real training. The only way to successfully learn the inner workings of the job is to have a more senior paralegal who is willing to take the time to sit down with you and teach you how to be successful. - As others have stated, your experience will truly depend on the team you are placed on/hired onto. A handful of the attorneys are truly good people, who respect your position as a caseworker, and understand that you probably have no immigration experience. Other attorneys expect you to have read the entirety of 8CFR on the weekend before you started at the firm. - Opportunities for growth are forced upon you. Toward the end of my tenure at the firm, our team was so short staffed that I was tasked with drafting responses to Requests for Evidence issued by the government. This is a job traditionally handled by an attorney, but was thrust upon me, an Assistant Paralegal I, with 1.5 years of experience. While they were certainly interesting cases to work on, they involved several hours of research and gathering of evidence, on top of my normal caseload. - No opportunities for professional development. We never had any opportunities for firm wide training, instruction, or networking events sponsored by the firm. Not that the paralegals at the firm would have had any time to attend these events, but they would have been a nice thought. - Lastly, nearly all of the paralegals that I worked closely with were negatively affected by the working environment in some way. I will only speak for myself, but my mental health took a turn for the worse as my teams situation continued to deteriorate. On more than one occasion I woke up from a fever dream, thinking that I had forgotten something about a case and was being berated by an attorney. I can happily say that I have been out the firm for nearly 4 months, and I am so much happier.

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