Paylocity reviews

3.1

45% would recommend to a friend

(3,227 total reviews)
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Toby Williams

47% approve of CEO

40% positive business outlook

Paylocity has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 3,227 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Paylocity employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
1.0
Mar 27, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some of us still have work from home opportunities (which is slowly being taken away). The benefits and pay are good when you consider the tradeoff for work from home.

Cons

Many have recently reviewed and i'll repeat that we are a culture in decline and a product that is motionless. We work on a HCM that does not scale and working in product management here is cannibalistic, not collaborative to work across teams to get dependencies taken care of. We focus more on our own individual product versus customer outcomes, which results in the fragmentation and disconnects that are visible to clients. The favoritism at the leadership level is real with many tenured at the top dictating roadmaps and process behind closed doors. Their way of instituting improvements is adding processes versus optimization efforts. It's no wonder PMs cannot focus on delivering good products and customer outcomes when we're scribing all day for powerpoint decks that are cursory checks for leaders to check the box on knowing what we're working on. Culturally we're in decline. So many reductions in partner teams or sudden terminations make this a fearsome place to work rather than being able to focus on delivering customer impact. The once great culture that attracted me here has gone, and with our new CEO appointment, it's not a coincidence we've turned sour so quickly. Forced attrition is far cheaper and better received on wall street, which makes him look great in the short term. It's a shame we're becoming PayCom Jr.

1.0
Mar 18, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The remote work is great and the people you work alongside (peers) are 10/10 incredible.

Cons

Unclear Compensation Structure and Favoritism: The compensation plan is not aligned with the expectations placed on recruiters. Your annual bonus is tied to individual performance but, in practice, is based on team goals. Even if you hit your individual target, you may still lose out on significant portions (10-50%) of your bonus if the team misses its goals. Many employees who exceeded their individual goals last year were still penalized, with no clear explanation, often finding out only a day or two before payout. There is also a noticeable culture of favoritism within the team, where certain individuals are consistently rewarded with promotions, better territories, and more opportunities. These individuals adhere to the company’s culture of toxic positivity, while employees who provide constructive feedback or advocate for change are labeled as “complainers” or “negative.” This will also result in another hit to your bonus. If you're not one of the favorites, you will find that your efforts go largely unrecognized, both financially and otherwise. Leadership Overcommitment and Unrealistic Expectations: The team is consistently overcommitted, which leads to an environment where it’s nearly impossible to meet goals. There are numerous obstacles created by HR and TA leadership that hinder recruiters from placing candidates in time, such as increasing lead times for background checks, compensation exceptions being denied, and redundant data entry across multiple platforms. In addition, there are multiple team meetings per week, sometimes more than one in a day, and they're consumed by icebreaker games and “team-building” activities, yet leadership still questions why recruiters aren’t hitting goals and why activity is lagging. Fear-Driven Leadership and Unreasonable Demands: TA leadership operates through fear, with constant threats of performance plans or job loss. Many hardworking and high performing team members have been placed on performance plans. It is suggested that you be working after hours and weekends to meet team goals. Missing a monthly target often results in a performance conversation, and missing two months (even for reasons beyond your control) leads to being placed on a performance plan. Many factors affecting performance, such as leadership denying compensation requests or candidates declining offers, are out of the recruiter's control. Despite this, recruiters are still held accountable, even in cases where candidates push back on offers due to personal matters like family emergencies. Recruiters work tirelessly to attract top candidates for open roles, only to have them shewed away by out-of-touch hiring managers / leadership making north of 300k per year, who say that candidates aren't "deserving" of small sign on bonuses that prevent the candidate from taking a significant pay cut to come work for us. Lack of Support and Unrealistic Goals: Team calls are littered with requests for recruiters to "do more" or "think outside the box" to hit goals, yet leadership refuses to acknowledge that the targets are unattainable. There's little support provided for recruiters working with hiring managers who are poor partners—canceling candidate interviews with little notice, rejecting candidates without sufficient feedback, and making rude / inappropriate comments to recruiters on staffing calls. Recruiters are forced to work with these challenges at the expense of their own performance, only to be scrutinized by leadership. Ignored Feedback and Deteriorating Culture Despite providing feedback directly to leadership, the culture continues to deteriorate. Repeated attempts to address these issues have been ignored, leading me to share my experience here in the hope that it will resonate with others. If you've been here long enough, you've probably noticed that the team turns over every 2-3 years and and whole new batch of recruiters join. This is happening now and leading to a lot of hardworking, talented individuals walking out the door and being replaced with unsuspecting fresh faces. You are nothing but a number on this team.

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Paylocity Response
1y
Thanks for sharing your experience—we hear you. Your passion for your work and dedication to bringing in top talent is evident, and we appreciate everything you’ve contributed. We know that clarity around compensation and expectations is critical, and we recognize that when goals feel misaligned, it can be frustrating. We're always looking at ways to create more transparency and ensure hard work is recognized and rewarded in meaningful ways. Building a culture where feedback is truly heard and acted on is just as important. Leadership should empower and support, not create roadblocks. We take that seriously, and your perspective highlights areas where we can improve. It’s important that our team feels set up for success, and that includes having realistic goals, clear communication, and a culture that values both results and the people behind them. We appreciate you taking the time to share your thoughts. Feedback like this helps us grow, and we’re committed to making Paylocity a place where everyone feels valued, supported, and set up to do their best work.
1.0
Sep 14, 2024

Unfair Termination

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay for Benefit Managers

Cons

They fired me while in the hospital and then fought unemployment saying that I quit. I have not had income for 11 weeks and now have to get a lawyer. Never work here!

Viewing 139 - 141 of 3,227 Reviews

Glassdoor has 3,283 Paylocity reviews submitted anonymously by Paylocity employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Paylocity is right for you.