If you read this and you are a potential employee (STAY AWAY!) - Anonymous employee YesVideo Employee Review

1.0
1 Oct 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I honestly can't really think of any pros that come along with working at this company. There is nothing positive about this place.

Cons

Be prepared to be fired at any time, you are constantly compared against your peers numbers. You do not get regular raises here. There are 2 floors in this company the top floor (where all of the important people are) and the second floor (where all of the labor workers are). This company does not care about you personally, they only care about how much work you can do and how fast can you do it. They usually hire temp contractors so they can lay them off without having to pay them unemployment. At the time of reviewing this company they are at 1.8.. I think that should be a sign to anyone trying to get a job here. Please do yourself a favor and DO NOT WORK HERE. It will be headache after headache and your hours will be cut ALL of the time.

Explore other reviews about YesVideo

5.0
10 Jun 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Was a fine place to work, with a fine people. It is a company that takes good care of their employees.

Cons

Long work hours with mandatory overtime for peak seasons. The company informs you ahead of time, however.

3.0
30 Mar 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I worked a couple years ago at YesVideo in the Call Center department. My fellow team members were wonderful people, both as co-workers and friends. It was a great stepping stone to an even better position later on in my career. I got to work directly with customers as well as with the key strategic partners - the 2 largest at the time were Costco and Walgreens.

Cons

Call center work was tedious, repetitive, and boring. Every call center representative was vastly underpaid and rarely given raises. I'm pretty sure back in 2008-2009, every rep had a starting rate of either $10 or $11 and hour, no matter the experience they had. I remember when one person working there for probably a year and a half and being refused a raise. Another was a college student who was a part timer, and being part time was their reason for refusing her a raise. I was there for about a year and a half, and was never even discussed with about a raise. Then again, this was during the peak of the economic crisis and they could've frozen all raises. There was no incentive to do good work. You just show up and do it, which gets boring very quickly.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All