Strong Innovation, Great Benifits but a hard place to advance if you’re female beyond mid level. - Anonymous employee TransUnion Employee Review

4.0
12 Jan 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Excellent executive leadership - I hope the CTO is drinking from the fountain of youth so he can stay forever. Almost unparalleled medical and FTO benifits. The company continues to innovate and expand which creates an exciting place to work with strong future growth in the industry

Cons

Like many organizations the white late 40’s early 50’s male rules. There is very limited diversity where some teams do not have any female leadership or female team members.

avatar
TransUnion Response
7y
I really appreciate you taking time to leave a candid review and share your honest experience. We have such an awesome culture at TransUnion, so it concerns me to think that anyone would feel limited in their career in any way. Please know that having a diverse and inclusive workplace is not just something we talk about - it's something we expect. We'll continue to work on this. In the meantime, please reach out to me so I can learn more about your experience and how to help. - Anne Leyden, EVP HR

Explore other reviews about TransUnion

5.0
18 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The interview process was very smooth and the recruiter responded back fairly quickly

Cons

After the first assessment, it took some time to hear back from them

3.0
10 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

In your down time, if you're caught up on tickets you can basically do whatever you want granted, you're still attentive to phone calls No overbearing managers checking in on you

Cons

Company feels very disorganized TransUnion uses SalesForce as their main ticketing system, and it is not maintained at all. When a new account manager takes over an account, half the time they do not update who the account manager is in SalesForce or they will simply create a new account. You'll receive a lot of complaints from customers informing you they do not know who their account manager. I've been told by customers that Experian and Equifax list who their account manager is when they log into their accounts. A lot of times you'll be sent on a wild goose chase to track down who the actual account manager is. There are many accounts with the same name or a slightly altered name. For example, there will be walmart, WalMart, WALMART, and you will have to figure out which is the most up to date account for the customer. Some account managers flat out ignore calls and emails from their customers which ends up causing more work for you since they'll be calling and emailing whatever number and/or email they can, and you'll team majority of the time receives the brunt of it. Feels less like IT/technical work and more like a call center where your sole objective is to push tickets and direct tickets to the correct location. There will be many tickets you are unable to resolve on your own because you do not have the correct permissions. Unfortunately, this role is the catch all net for when the system, customers, or other TransUnion employees are unsure who to go to for an issue, meaning, you'll also receive a lot of tickets that do not fall into your scope. For example, you'll receive tickets for billing and invoices, account managers not responding to customers, questions about websites/applications you do not know, and more. A lot of the login error tickets could be reduced if TransUnion websites informed the customer what the issue is. For example, instead of the website informing the customer their account has been locked, or they need to perform a password reset, the website will only tell the customer to contact the 1-800 number, which also creates more work for you. There's honestly a lot more wrong with this position that makes you basically feel like you are the bottom of the barrel, but I only have so much energy

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All