InComm Reviews

3.8

71% would recommend to a friend

(778 total reviews)
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Brooks Smith

56% approve of CEO

66% positive business outlook

InComm has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 778 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The InComm employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finance industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

778 reviews
2.0
8 Apr 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Most of the mid-management and general workers at InComm are excellent at their jobs and genuinely good people. Some teams are well run and those managers insulate their employees from the worst of upper management. "Pit-bull" legal department.

Cons

Autocratic management style. It uses acquisitions to cover operating losses and inefficiencies. Massively high turnover in the IT dept., over many years, which makes everyone else's' job more challenging. No reward for high performance. Don't bother going the extra mile, it won't get you any financial reward. Violates it's own HR policies. Women and minorities are generally not promoted or rewarded for their work. Others reporting repeated inappropriate behavior resulted in them being blamed, marginalized, and either quitting in disgust or gradually being forced out. Snap, emotionally driven, business decisions are periodically made by the CEO and everyone from EVP down just gets to deal with the impact and fallout.

2.0
28 Jul 2014

Terminus

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Convenient location. Paid Parking. Gym. Grandiose titles to adorn business cards. Free business cards.

Cons

Regardless of your position, you will work in a chaotic frenzy and feel incredibly unaccomplished while you toil away at the stream of insolent "busy-work" while blindly sticking ineffective virtual duct-tape into a raging storm of fire rather than formulating effective solutions (*because that costs money, ya'll)...or you will completely give up and stare blankly into your computer screen wishing it would all just go away. For such a wealthy company, we sure do shortchange the most important sectors by limiting essential resources. If A equals the equipment and personnel required to do B, then C equals monetary gain. Math. Science. Unfortunately, if you want to work for a company that doesn't read like a sardonic "Dilbert" comic strip, then keep on moving because this place is as cliche as all get out. I can legitimately list one director and one VP among the herd that can understand basic/fundamental mathematics while offering perfunctory tidbits of leadership and such, however, for the most part - the 80/20 rule is applicable with incompetence stemming from upper and middle management. This company is grandiose in offering a bevy of elaborate titles for those wishing to adorn their business cards with (*which may be deemed a "pro" if the weight matched thusly). For the few (*you know who you are) who are in the trenches, who give up their free-time, who achieve zero work/life balance, who pivot and joust, who create on demand, who fall on grenades, and who without fail come into the office and decidedly choose to shake off the jaded and entitled layers in order to stop the levy from collapsing - you deserve at the very least a raise. A LARGE RAISE. Something substantial. Something to quell the internal pangs of hunger during the oftentimes missed lunches (*and dinners). You deserve an HR Department that doesn't limit salary increases BECAUSE you are an internal candidate and they can only offer a paltry 3-10% if even that. (*title changes and internal movement within the company) It's odd to me that we would celebrate the hiring of complete strangers over someone internal. It's as if we are all in on the great "SECRET" of the chaos and a chaste newbie unfettered by this mess can be thrown into the machine and churned out once broken and used. Solace can be found here. There is hope. It does require a hefty dose of (*dark) humor and a penchant for working through the inept to find the gems.

1.0
8 Oct 2018

Horrible; Don’t even apply

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

When you are doing your bosses work, you get noticed by other departments. 4 weeks vacation, IF you make it 4 years. I thought it was great that they sent me a new iPhone after I left company.

Cons

You will never get promoted at Incomm; management tells you that you should change jobs within the company every 1.5 years, but your boss won’t let you move up. You are getting them promoted, so why would they want you to leave. Your boss will actually laugh at you if you ask about your future at the company and then tell you that you won’t amount to anything. Very high turnover, lots of bullying, and manipulation. Managers send you late night messages on Skype, make promises they can’t keep, bother you on vacation, call you constantly to complain about Incomm customers such as Sam’s Club, call them idiots in emails. Pay is horrible; if you are lucky to get bonuses, be prepared to lose one or two due to lack of training on your inept managers part. Incomm Conference calls are a bashing of internal employees mixed with “where did you vacation this weekend?” Senior VP’s sound like pre-schoolers and blame all departments to make themselves look good. Incomm is Hunger Games and Mean Girls mixed with some Funny Farm and GroundHog Day. Before you waste an hour filling out their horrible online job application, please beware, you were warned.

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