Steer clear of this terrible company. - NOC Technician GTT Employee Review

1.0
31 May 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

None. There is not one single benefit to working for this company in any capacity.

Cons

The pay is utterly abysmal. There is no room for growth or improvement. Management will make promises on things that are never upheld. You are simply an expendable cog in the machine unless you have one of the top tier positions. The scope of support is never made clear as a new company is acquired every six months with no training on how to support any of the new systems. Which also lead to mass lay offs and unclear shifting of responsibilities. Due to the constant acquisitions, you never knew if you were going to have a job. The working environment is toxic and everyone is unhappy. Supervisors are impossible to get a hold of for escalations and escalations routinely went ignored. Customers were constantly soft disconnected due to their bills never being paid either due to the billing dept not doing their job, or not sending the customer a bill to begin with. The team I was part of were all busted down to glorified secretaries in an attempt to put a bandage over call volume. But this only lead to there being more tickets with less people to work them. Processes are broken and never addressed, and there is no accountability.

Explore other reviews about GTT

5.0
30 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Lots of opportunities for zealous sales professionals who want to be successful. Supportive management and team work culture. Hard work is recognized and rewarded.

Cons

Some processes are outdated and slow sales cycle down .

2.0
23 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Many talented and dedicated employees who genuinely care about doing quality work. Exposure to complex, high‑impact challenges that can help you grow quickly. Opportunities to collaborate across teams and influence meaningful initiatives when leadership direction is clear.

Cons

Leadership turnover is extremely high, and each change brings new priorities, reorganizations, and shifting expectations. Long term direction is inconsistent, and employees often feel the impact of decisions made without continuity or context. Performance management lacks transparency and fairness. Expectations are not clearly communicated, feedback is often avoided or delivered only after decisions are finalized, and employees may be evaluated on roles or responsibilities that were never properly defined or supported. Employees who receive negative reviews are often surprised. Role changes can feel abrupt and pressured. Employees are sometimes moved into newly created or restructured positions without clear responsibilities, onboarding, or direction... yet are still held fully accountable for outcomes. Communication around difficult topics is limited. Leadership is reluctant to acknowledge broader organizational challenges, including turnover and layoffs, which leaves employees confused and fuels speculation. Workload expectations can be extreme. It is common for employees to absorb attrition, take on responsibilities from other departments, or work very long hours to keep operations running, often without additional support or recognition. There is increasing reliance on shifting work to lower cost countries rather than backfilling critical roles, which can create uneven workloads and impact quality and continuity. Compensation, severance, and recognition practices can feel misaligned with the level of responsibility carried. Decisions around bonuses and severance lack transparency, and employees may find themselves excluded from compensation tied to prior year performance due to the timing of organizational changes. The timing of certain employment decisions can leave long tenured employees feeling undervalued and financially disadvantaged.

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