Progressive Insurance reviews

3.9

75% would recommend to a friend

(8,999 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 8,999 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
3.0
Sep 1, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It's a great company. The company has certain incentives set-up to show that the company cares about the well-being of their employees. The benefits are great, and the pay is competitive. It's probably one of the biggest things that turned me on to the company. They also provide a decent amount of time off. My office is a great office. I get along with everyone in my office. Everyone enjoys each other's company. There are some options for job diversity such as being on the catastrophe response team. If you're chosen, you can go to headquarters for 3 weeks and work catastrophe claims. It's 21 days straight, one day at the beginning and end for travel and only one day off in the middle of the rotation there. Other than that, you're working 7:45am-7pm. It's a long hard schedule, but it's an opportunity to make some extra money if you're willing to put your life on hold for almost a month. Locally there are some promotional opportunities like handling injuries and property damage estimates and repairs. Sometimes those positions are sparse.

Cons

The workload can be absurd, and the job gets old fast. Everyday is stressful because you're dealing with people's lives. You've got the parties' demands from the claims you get assigned, and you've got management cracking the whip as they monitor numbers all day long. More tenured reps are able to accomplish work faster (and they seem the handle the pressure easier). Once you've been there 3-4 years you've got it down. For someone who is still in his first two years, I've pretty much had enough of the job. I dread going to work, and when I'm there I feel stuck in the perpetual cycle of doing the same thing over and over again, day in and day out, hearing the same stories and dealing with the same drama. The job doesn't change. It's stress everyday, dealing with people's problems and making big decisions that affect people, and it's the same repeat of the same scenario everyday. The job doesn't change. Further, you're in a cube all day long, stuck to a phone and a computer. This is a soul-killing job for someone who needs more creativity and liberty in the job he or she performs. I've gone out of my way to show interest in promotion and to learn new aspects of the company, and the response I keep getting from management is promises that always fall through. I am not one of those employees looking for an easy job, and who is too lazy to accomplish a job. I stay late most days, and I consistently meet my goals. I've volunteered to do a lot of extra functions to prove myself to management, more than what others have done on my team, and I still get looked over. After over a year and a half, I feel chewed up and spit out and totally unappreciated. I was beaten out of a promotion by a guy who has been here only six months. It takes more than six months to get the job down. But he got the job because he interviewed better than I did, but he never had files reviewed because he was so new to the job. His work was never proven. It was just because he interviewed better. The response the supervisor gave me for not getting the job was total nonsense. He used my words against me to make me sound like I don't have enough customer service experience and that I don't know how to make decisions. Me and the other candidate both shared our interview experience, and from his answers he gave the safest, vaguest answers I've ever heard for an interview. I assumed wrong when I thought they were looking for substance and motivation. That's the problem with this company. They look at everything like a number instead of looking at the reality of how things really are. If it doesn't match up to their computation, it's no good. So robotic. I'm at the point where I don't want to give anything extra for this company because they don't appreciate it. Promotions are few and far between, and they play favorites. When talking to my supervisor about a claim, I have been shut down on the spot like, "I don't want to hear it." But another rep will walk up to her cube not long after me, and she'll listen to him for over five minutes. I would recommend getting this job for a year or two for the experience, and start looking for a job as soon as you get this one unless you're good at stomaching the Kool-Aid and can come to work for the same stressful scenario everyday and always feel like you're behind in your work.

1.0
Jul 25, 2009

Progressive...ly Downhill

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They provide a paycheck. You can surf facebook at work. You can wear jeans. On-site health care at the larger sites.

Cons

It is difficult to move up. You can make lateral moves from one dead-end position to another and work as hard as humanly possible, but your chances of moving up are slim. Managers are constantly in meetings, "team-building" with each other or learning how to manage (or coloring pictures, who knows), but they are RARELY there doing any actual team-building. The atmosphere is like a third-grade classroom with silly contests, decorations, etc, which would be great if they didn't also treat you like you are in the third-grade. A lot of really talented people start there at a young age, but Progressive has no interest or method to identify these people and retain them. Most of these people languish in lowly, monotonous positions because you have to have supervisory experience to become a manager. That's difficult if you start right after school. All of the reasons I was happy at the beginning -- great benefits, relaxed atmosphere, belief in the company philosophy -- faded away completely. I started there deluded that Progressive was a place to work for your whole career, that I would have opportunities to move up and do great things, that Progressive would remain true to its core values. Well, I was wrong. When I left, morale was at all time low, but from what I understand, it's still on the downward slide. You are a number there. Until your number is up.

2.0
Jan 21, 2022

overworked employees

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good benefits and fair compensation

Cons

workload is unrealistic. not enough hours in the day to meet requirements

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Glassdoor has 9,268 Progressive Insurance reviews submitted anonymously by Progressive Insurance employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Progressive Insurance is right for you.