Progressive Insurance reviews

3.9

75% would recommend to a friend

(8,994 total reviews)
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Tricia Griffith

88% approve of CEO

77% positive business outlook

Progressive Insurance has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 8,994 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Progressive Insurance employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Insurance industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

9K reviews
2.0
May 28, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pay is above average for all positions in Cleveland. You won't make more money anywhere else locally. Gainshare is a great cherry on top at the end of the year. Campus 2 is awesome, tons of office space and the underground hallway is a nice way to burn some energy between meetings - which you'll learn quick is a great way to burn off all the stress this place causes you. Cafeteria is good, food is okay but dicey, some days you'll have stomach issues afterwards. Beats having to leave for lunch though, saves a lot of time. Job safety, especially during recessions. As long as the population grows, the revenue stream does.

Cons

This place is filled with complacency and burnout. Even HR comes across like they don't care. Everyone on my team (including sister teams I worked with), including all the managers I had were completely stressed to the bone and running on fumes, and very open about hating their jobs. Headcount for most teams is way below what it should be, so everyone is doing triple the workload you'd find anywhere else. I worked at 6 different companies (mostly tech companies) before this and I was completely shocked at how much work everyone had, it's not sustainable. I will never work in a non-tech company again. A co-worker of mine experienced extreme depression and anxiety because of the job, and they found it extremely difficult to get any help within the company from management and HR. These two entities instead tried to protect the company instead of having empathy for my co-worker, they did nothing to try and help and reduce the stress and instead blamed this person for having the problems. After seeing this I wrote my ticket to get out of here. Managers here don't understand the service or skillsets they are managing. They are purely resource managers, they make sure your queue is filled with work and that it's getting completed. They don't know any of the technical details of the work you do. This can lead to them not understanding concerns you have about a certain project as you try to prevent it from derailing or going completely wrong - so you rarely get management support. It's all about "just get the work done" regardless of how pointless or wrong the execution outlined is. When you are drowning in work, they can't do anything about it. It's on you to do something about it. Very backwards. You'll find traditional IT flourishing here. Sharepoint and Lotus notes keep the internal business running, you'll be working on legacy tech, and in result your skillset and resume will suffer over time. You'll eventually be stuck here. Some have gotten to this point and accepted it, but at least they are making bank. Any new tech you try to bring in to solve problems is immediately scrutinized and blocked. You need to go through weeks of meetings in order to get approved to download and install anything. You also need to go through a change management process just to toggle some parameters on a server, this means a change management team that doesn't know anything about the tech you're doing has to decide whether or not to allow it to happen, and it can take a week to get approved. That "Lean" initiative is working well! Despite the newly established Cloud org, there still is an undertone of anti-Cloud, anti-container mindset in ETS because it threatens the old-timers' skillsets. They have no ambition to learn anything new and want to coast until retirement. It's in their best interest to road-block anything new and shiny that may make them irrelevant. The hype cycle is real, but some of this new tech is to make our jobs easier and allow us to deliver things faster. Embrace it. There's no working on one or two projects at a time. Instead you work on 10-15 projects at a time, and move each of them at a snails pace in a round-robin fashion every day. This also means you'll be in meetings from 9am-5pm every day, and you'll then need to do your actual work that you promised in the meetings after-hours at home. After all this, you'll still get the same raise % as the person on your team who did nothing all year because they try to be "fair". Most people here are nice, but there's a lot of people who aren't. Office politics are part of the game at the Lead / Consultant levels. You'll find this anywhere, but the toxicity of people here is pretty unique, because it's mixed with ignorance, partly because they haven't worked anywhere else since they graduated college in the 90s. A lot of people here reminisce about the old days at Progressive, pre-2008 where managers screamed at people like they were garbage and things were really combative. Most of the people working here learned from those people, I think that's partly to blame here. This place has more acronyms than the military. I think the C level actually cares and are trying to make changes. But this is a slow moving ship. Middle management is where all the problems are. Managers like to rotate to new teams every 3-5 years. The pattern here to get high up on the ladder is to rotate around to different parts of the company because experience in all areas of the company is highly valued. That's fine and all, but for you, this means when you eventually get a new manager, you have to take tons of extra time to help them understand what you actually do, what your team provides, and teach them the technology you're responsible for. It ends up being groundhog day for people who have been here a long time. It really slows things down. It would be much better to promote the high performers on the team to managers so things run more smoothly like most companies. Don't be fooled by the Innovation Garage when you tour the building, it's just for show; a startup culture facade. There are some people who actually want to be innovative and work on new tech there, but it'll eventually be roadblocked if you want to put it into the actual environment. Most of the garage folk are just tying teams together to execute a project / idea / hunch that some director wants to try out. The services they provide are at the expense of other teams that actually do the work, they are just middlemen. Lastly, a lot of projects here don't end up going anywhere. You burn midnight oil on things that never see full production, but even if it's a pointless project that won't go anywhere, it'll still be treated like its the highest priority imagined and needs to be done yesterday.

4.0
Jan 20, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Work environment is friendly and casual - An excellent training program (Academy) - Management is very open-door - Frequent opportunities for advancement or lateral moves into different departments - Competitive pay with pretty large end-of-year bonuses - Decent benefits - 6 or 8 week short-term disability pay for childbirth (at a percentage of salary depending on tenure) - On-site café - On-site gym - On-site clinic - On-site chair massages * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I genuinely enjoyed my time at Progressive because of these reasons and more. I have always felt supported by my superiors and motivated to give this job my all because I know the company treats their employees equitably. The dress code is extremely casual and the environment is laid back for the most part. Expectations are clearly communicated and performance is now evaluated based on behaviors rather than strictly numbers or metrics. The gainshare (profit sharing) is a huge perk - for 2015, I received over 10% of my salary as a bonus!

Cons

- Claims workload can be difficult to manage at peak times - Work-life balance is not what it should be - Split schedules REQUIRED for un-tenured adjusters - Even after becoming tenured, it is difficult to obtain a non-split schedule - The attendance policy needs reworking * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * The Centralized Claims Organization falls short in its promise of a work-life balance. While the workload can be difficult to manage at times, this is not really what I'm talking about (though as a newer rep, I had to consistently clock in overtime hours to keep up or get caught up). Split schedules are a requirement when you sign on as a call center adjuster with Progressive, but management makes it seem as though eventually, you will be able to request a more traditional schedule. I have not found this to be the case and I have worked in this organization for two years. In fact, one of my coworkers recently celebrated her five-year anniversary with Progressive and only JUST got weekends off, the great white whale of a CCU rep. Even applying to work one weekend day and one weekday off in a row (i.e. having Friday and Saturday off and working Sunday or Sunday and Monday off and working Saturday) is denied for some mysterious "business need" that is never elaborated on. Additionally, the attendance policy needs to be tweaked slightly. While now there is a sliding schedule that allows for tardiness to be made up for (as long as you are clocked in within 30 minutes of your shift start), a late arrival or early quit is equal to an unexpected absence. If you are sick, or if you have something suddenly come up and you are not pre-approved for time off well in advance (and time off is difficult to obtain on Mondays, Fridays and Saturdays), you can quickly find yourself barred from advancement opportunities until infractions begin dropping off ONE YEAR LATER. If you have a particularly rough go of it with illness or family issues or anything that has you unexpectedly late, leaving early, or being absent entirely, there is not much you can do but wait out the marks against your record. It's disheartening at best and crushing at worst, especially if you're a capable and high-performing candidate whose career aspirations are put on hold because of unforeseen circumstances.

2.0
Jun 14, 2024

Mentally and emotionally draining

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Compensation 401k Gainshare bonus Promotes from within Work from home

Cons

Leadership Culture Workload Work-life balance

Viewing 28 - 30 of 8,994 Reviews

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