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American Electric Power

Engaged employer

Going in the wrong direction - Anonymous employee American Electric Power Employee Review

2.0
7 Feb 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

We are a regulated utility company. Customers require our product for modern society.

Cons

Many inexperienced employees being promoted over more qualified employees. Friendship and personal relationship is the key to a promotion. The quality issues are starting to show with this behavior. Once experience requirements leave, so does quality. Every complaint on this form about IT seem to be true. I am a long way away from the IT department, but have to use information technology to complete my job. Easy tasks are hard to do because of the constant IT failures. The work load is getting larger. Everyone needs information to do their jobs, without production is lost. Almost everyday a system is down. I can't wait until this happens to me in an emergency. It will be my fault anyway. Seems to be no accountability in senior leaders anymore.

Explore other reviews about American Electric Power

5.0
2 Jul 2026
Anonymous intern
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great Culture and leadership team

Cons

Fast moving and fast paced enviroment

2.0
23 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Our team is genuinely one of the company’s greatest strengths. People consistently show up for each other, whether someone has a question, needs guidance, or just needs a second set of eyes. There’s a real sense of kindness and collaboration here — everyone jumps in without hesitation, and it creates an environment where you feel supported, valued, and able to do your best work.

Cons

One of the biggest challenges is the lack of formal training when you start, which makes it difficult to feel fully prepared in your role. Management is often busy and not always available when questions come up, so getting timely guidance can be inconsistent. Processes and directions also tend to shift quickly — announcements are made, and then expectations change shortly after, which creates confusion. At times, upper leadership communicates in a way that feels more like talking at employees rather than engaging with them, and concerns raised by staff can be overshadowed by comments about leadership bonuses or priorities that don’t align with what employees are asking for.

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