Disunited company - Customer Service Representative TerraCycle Employee Review

2.0
3 Mar 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People working there: friendly Culture and values

Cons

First, the location. The company is located in an industrial estate in Perivale (Greater London) with nothing fancy around. There has been a lot of employee turn over due to a lack of benefits offered by the company and the absence of recognition. The fundamental weakness of Terracycle is the lack of communication between departments and the insufficiency of adaptability. Some teams, like Operations, don't see the big picture and parallel factors. They only focus on their daily tasks without any real understanding of the problems encountered by other teams, and they refuse to see or to admit that things are not going well. The company has grown exponentially and some continue to work as if it were still a start-up of 20 employees...

Explore other reviews about TerraCycle

5.0
29 Sept 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Mission driven Flexibility (WFH/PTO/Hours etc) Voice is heard and opinion matters

Cons

Demanding pace of play comp is a little on the low side

2.0
10 Apr 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The immediate team is great to work with; essentially, anyone below the VP level is genuinely a good person, and we all share a common goal of wanting to make a positive impact for the majority.

Cons

This company prioritizes appearances over people. Leadership is focused on making things look good for potential buyers, not on supporting employees. When people leave, their roles aren’t replaced — the remaining team is expected to pick up the slack without raises or recognition. Salaries are low, and there's no accountability at the top. They often say 'bring your solutions, we value entrepreneurial spirit,' but ignore input and push poorly planned ideas that lead to failure. There’s also a toxic culture of gaslighting lower-level employees into doing more, without ever questioning if deeper changes are needed. The company has increasingly shifted its focus toward profit and optics, drifting away from its original mission and values. The return-to-office policy highlights this disconnect — lower-level employees are required to badge in so attendance can be tracked, while upper management can negotiate exceptions to this rule. If you're sick or miss a day in-office, you're expected to "make it up" by coming in on a Monday or Friday, even if there is no one around. It’s demoralizing, controlling, and shows a lack of trust in the people actually doing the work.

6
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