Power Home Remodeling reviews

4.6

93% would recommend to a friend

(6,309 total reviews)
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Corey Schiller & Asher Raphael

97% approve of CEO

93% positive business outlook

Power Home Remodeling has an employee rating of 4.6 out of 5 stars, based on 6,309 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Power Home Remodeling employee rating is 27% above average for employers within the Construction, Repair & Maintenance Services industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
1.0
Nov 9, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Unlimited earning potential -Loads of training. First four weeks of training are paid. -Upbeat, casual work atmosphere -Company-sponsored holiday trips, outings, etc.

Cons

Power seems to be all about misleading people - homeowners and employees alike. And please note, some of those 5-star ratings are absolutely, positively fake. Please don't allow yourself to be mislead like so many others. They list the "sales representative" position as base + commission, with the base being around 30k. There is no base. It is absolutely, positively, 100% commission. The exception is that you are paid $500/week (before taxes) during your first four weeks of training. 100% commission serves some of the reps extremely well - and by some of the reps I am referring to perhaps 5% of the company. Red flag. Beware: very much like the sales pitch, the interview feels very scripted. It's a lot about the company history, income potential, and so on. Very little about who you are and what you can bring to the company. Red flag. The interview process is based almost entirely on misinformation. You will be fed "pie in the sky" numbers and statistics in an effort to sell you on the position and get you in the door, and the reason they must do that is because there is such an enormous turnover rate. You'll hear about the top reps in the company who have financial freedom and how even the average reps are making $70K+/year. You will be fed statistic after statistic after statistic about average commissions, average number of appointments per week, average this, average that. I am unsure where all these averages and statistics came from because in my experience, they are simply not realistic. You are told that each appointment is "scrubbed" for maximum efficiency. Also not realistic. There are so many appointments coming in that they don't seem to have the manpower to scrub them properly. It is not uncommon to show up to a house where people aren't home or who have already cancelled, even though they are supposedly confirmed hours prior. That's great news when you have driven 45 minutes using your own money for gas and tolls (no reimbursement for either), just to find out that you have absolutely no chance at making a sale. Additionally, it is not uncommon to go to a home where Power Home Remodeling Group simply can't do the work that the homeowner desires, which is also something they are supposed to "scrub" for in the appointment setting process. Red flag. You are told in your interview that your first two weeks are classroom style training, 9-4, and then the following two weeks you are going out on your own appointments. False. All four weeks of training you will be expected in that classroom environment from 9-5. And after 5pm you will then be responsible for going out on shadow appointments or running your own, and sometimes will not get home until 12am or later. All of this while you are being pressed to soak up an enormous amount of information, study, and so on. Sound stressful? Then this job isn't for you. Fast forward to when you're out of training. You're no longer required to be in the office everyday, although you may be encouraged and even pressured to go in. So instead of heading into the office around 9am, you will be expected to be dressed and ready to head out to an appointment from 8am until 7pm. You are basically "on call" for the entire day. These appointments, which can be up to 55 miles from your house, come to you through a text message and email that will arrive no earlier than two hours before you need to be there. And it is not uncommon for you to receive that notification minutes before the appointment, leaving you rushed and with no way to contact the homeowner to apologize for the delay. And if it weren't bad enough, most of what you will tell homeowners feels untrue. You will be encouraged to make the sale however you can, regardless of what promises you make that are sure to be broken down the line, and regardless of whether or not that person wants you out of their home. To summarize: aggressive recruitment tactics with embellished numbers and false claims that will leave you wondering. Very long hours with little room for leisure. No reimbursement for gas or tolls. A high-pressured sales methodology that will appeal to a cut-throat sort of personality; if you're looking to feel as though you are helping people, this is not for you. Extremely high turnover rate in both "marketing" and sales.

2.0
Oct 26, 2012

Long hours, low pay

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work environment is very positive. Everyone is very supportive and loves having fun. Group activities occur often. Sales opportunities are available

Cons

The hours are very long, bonuses are difficult to hit, base pay is low, very little transparency into the bonus system, some coworkers are lazy or criminals

1.0
Oct 24, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You can earn a decent living if you put in a lot of effort. Selling a solid product. Nice people. Decent job training. Christmas Party is pretty awesome.

Cons

Sales Rep: Commission based. Prepare to not have a life. Your on call from early AM till 8PM (You can be out as late as 1AM) and prepare to work Sat too. Costumers are tricked by the marketer into thinking that they are getting a quick and easy estimate when realistically your trying to hard sell them. The sales pitch alone last two hours and that is not including any side conversations, questions, paper work, or house inspections. You run into a lot of angry people that just want you to leave but management gets pissed if you do not make it through your presentation. You make most of your money by overselling the product so your encouraged to mark up the price as much as possible. Turn over is very high. Very repetitive. Selling Robot Field Marketer: Door to Door sales! inconsistent pay structure. Working from 11 until about 8 or 9. They cart you out to neighborhoods in vans so you can go door to door offering people free estimates (Roofing. Siding, Widows) tricking people into thinking that you just got done with a project in their neighborhood, and that your just giving free estimates to all the neighbors. Your trained to not lie but mislead people into thinking that they are getting a quick and easy estimate...They train you to say quick because 2 - 3 hours out of someones life, really isn't that long. Then you have to get that person to answer a bundle of questions about their home. The uncomfortable part comes when you have to get that customer on the phone to talk to the call center to confirm these questions, Schedule a time THAT WEEK, and to make sure that the spouse is at home, which is usually a Instant red flag for people. You can only canvass neighborhoods so many times before you run out of people who haven't been annoyed by the company. A lot of towns have even banned the company and even will ticket you if you get caught... but the company pays for the ticket so its okay..i guess. Eventually like the do not call list, there is going to be a do not knock list, so leads are definitely shrinking. The other thing that sucks is that you work when its dark, which kind of creeps out the homeowners. Walking around in the winter is also not fun, especially when people are forced out of their nice warm house to talk about windows and siding. Turn over is very high I worked at Power for a year and was very high producer. I made a decent amount of money, but i did this through misleading nice people. It is an opportunity for some people to earn a income that they might not have otherwise reached. It is very inconsistent and you will only do well if your really good at scamming people. Only top 10% make decent money. Over all a very Humbling Experience.

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Glassdoor has 6,388 Power Home Remodeling reviews submitted anonymously by Power Home Remodeling employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Power Home Remodeling is right for you.