Overwhelming workload leads to emotional burnout
Pros
Nothing at all is a pro just grateful for a job even if it sucks
Cons
The position is mentally and emotionally exhausting. The workload is overwhelming, the metrics are often unrealistic, and management frequently seems disconnected from what the job actually entails day to day. Everything becomes about numbers, closures, and productivity goals that don’t even feel attainable while still trying to provide quality service. Now we’re expected to be on the phones all day while also managing our own claims, emails, inspections, estimates, follow-ups, and upset customers. How is anyone supposed to properly handle their claims and maintain quality at the same time? At some point, quality and customer care start taking a back seat just to survive the workload. There’s constant pressure, little work-life balance, unrealistic expectations, emotional burnout, and not enough support from leadership that truly understands the demands of the role. Many higher-ups only see reports and spreadsheets, but don’t fully understand the stress adjusters deal with daily trying to juggle impossible workloads while helping people during difficult situations. Adjusters are expected to do the work of multiple people at once, and eventually the burnout becomes unavoidable.