Don't believe the positive reviews - Client Services Calero Employee Review

1.0
27 Apr 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The fact that you get a paycheck is the only positive thing about working here. And some of the employees are nice. And they always have a monthly treat for birthdays 🎂

Cons

The CEO asked for positive reviews but I have integrity and believe in being honest. The positive reviews you see are likely written by management executives or jelly back employees who are afraid to really speak up. This company and its communication practices are the worst! The only people who could possibly enjoy working here is upper management because they do whatever they want to and they don't care about their employees or keep them in the know. The Town Hall meetings are pointless and did I mention boooring 😴. Nothing gets executed from the meetings. Nothing. The morale is HORRIBLE. It's non existent. No one ever seems to want to be at work. And some of the executives don't even take a second look at you, let alone speak if you don't look like them.

Explore other reviews about Calero

5.0
2 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Technology first --- challenging, but rewarding

Cons

If you want to be lazy and just collect a paycheck, this is not the place for you.

2.0
10 Mar 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote Flexibility: Excellent support for working from home, which is a major benefit. Strong Peer Culture: The frontline team is incredible. People are hardworking, empathetic, and they are the primary reason the day to day is manageable.

Cons

Top-Down Implementation: Internal changes and tool rollouts are often managed without a functional feedback loop. There is a consistent disconnect between high level process design and the practical realities of the daily workload. Unoptimized Tooling: Internal systems are frequently released in an unfinished state, requiring significant manual workarounds. New tools often introduce more complexity than the legacy processes they replaced, yet performance expectations remain static despite the increased administrative burden. Rushed Automation Strategy: The push toward automation feels reactive and lacks clear documentation. This often leads to increased confusion and additional manual tasks to correct automated errors. Organizational Overlap: Due to unclear role definitions and resource gaps, employees are frequently expected to absorb responsibilities outside their primary scope. This creates a high stress environment where departmental boundaries are poorly defined. Approach to Employee Wellbeing: While work-life balance is discussed, the systemic issues causing burnout are rarely addressed. Feedback regarding workload or tool inefficiency is often met with pushback rather than proactive problem solving.

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