State Farm reviews

3.4

52% would recommend to a friend

(19,804 total reviews)
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Jon Farney

50% approve of CEO

46% positive business outlook

State Farm has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 19,804 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The State Farm employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Insurance industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

20K reviews
1.0
Feb 1, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I have nothing positive to say about this pathetic cult. They shouldn't even be in the insurance business. They hide indecencies. They act like they're a cult. Managers show favoritism. And they don't care about their employees.

Cons

There are so many cons with working for this company. They do NOT care about their employees, they're not flexible at all. The team managers are like robots with no empathy or emotion. It's hard to get time off. When you're going through personal matters at home, such as child care, finding someone to pick your children up, domestic violence, they don't work with you at all, just provide a textbook response for everything and expect you to kiss their __. It felt more like a cult. The managers showed favoritism and attacked certain people every chance they could get. Numerous managers were complained against for sexual harassment and State Farm just covered it up by promoting the manager or finding a reason to terminate the employee.

3.0
Jul 14, 2022

Please Read

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Claims system is easy to navigate once you've familiarized yourself with the system, MOST leadership is eager to help and guide you toward success on your career path, amazing medical benefits, and bonus is nice depending on how the company does that year.

Cons

Unless you're in a bodily injury or SIU role as a claim specialist, all of the other claims departments are team based - working in a team has many advantages don't get me wrong but it has many disadvantages when handling claim files.. Yearly raises do not accurately compensate employees for the hard work that they put in the year prior. The raises are based on your rating you receive. One year I was given an average rating: "meeting expectations, exceeding in some" and my raise was $0.37 per hour! I would've honestly rather have been given nothing, it was almost insulting to think that's an adequate raise.. They under-pay employees by a long shot compared to other insurance companies.. therefore the turnover rate is outrageous. People are comping and going and leaving departments in literal shambles because people are constantly quitting. Which leads to the next con. I have worked in 3 different departments at State Farm & they all put "freezes" on promotions when the department is under-staffed. Therefore, the employees that are exceeding and doing well are unable to move forward with their career paths and continue to be burnt out from the current state of the department they are in. These good employees sometimes eventually end up leaving to other companies because of this. It's a shame when that happens. The promotion freezes happen all across the company, in all departments, from what I have heard. Mandatory overtime is also something that they will activate at times. Before going into my current role, my last department was on mandatory over time for almost a year. I always did it and I'm not 100% sure what the consequences for it were but from what I have been told, if you don't complete the over time, it just negatively impacts your rating at the end of the year which ultimately impacts your raise. I can only speak for the claims roles when I say this as that is all of my background.. but the training for claims is terrible. Needs to be complete re-evaluated from the bottom to the top. I am lucky that I started in an associate claims role learning the basics and slowly transitioned into higher specialist roles building on my experience. With each promotion and each training class I went through I couldn't be more thankful for my experience I already had or I would truly have had no idea what I'd be doing. They often hire people from "off the streets", with little to no claims backgrounds and put them through this inadequate training process - this is leading to more turnover rates because these people are overwhelmed and unprepared when they hit the floor in their roles. I've seen this in 3 different departments in claims. Training needs a serious revamp.

2.0
May 11, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Stability, decent co workers for the most part

Cons

Cons outweigh pros in this dept/position. I was surely lied to by the recruiter. There is not frequent opportunity for OT. It is seldom. They still try to force you to commute to the office at minimum 1 week each month with how things are now, while others on your team or dept don’t have that added stress due to the schedule they got they are not required to commute while you struggle. They will even enforce mandatory overtime during the scheduled week in office while prior weeks and months no one get a crumb of OT so you have to sit and traffic even longer and pray no one hits your car. Back to back calls, a lot of frequent customers yelling and chewing you out. Was told call volume was not that heavy unless a big natural disaster hit. Well that was another lie. They don’t teach you 75% of what you really need to know during training. Ppl never answer the phone for the trainer line leaving you stuck and lost. Coworkers sometimes are not so nice. Some managers in this dept will duck and hide so they will not have to take an escalated call. I really could continue but I will stop here

Viewing 418 - 420 of 19,804 Reviews

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