Glass Ceiling - Relationship Banker Penn Community Bank Employee Review

1.0
12 Oct 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- The other employees that are stuck under the glass ceiling understand your pain and are great people. - They give you 6 free sessions at the penn foundation for therapy. (Trust me you will need it)

Cons

Do you like not receiving any overtime? Do you like breaking rules(and sometimes laws)? Do you like giving 110% and getting nothing in return? What about having all responsibility and stress of a branch manager but being paid as a teller? You will love PCB! Thier motto is "here we grow" but it's a empty promise for both customers as well as employees. If you show any compassion, you will be used for every once. You will be drained of all joy in 3 years tops. Good luck breaking the ceiling.

Explore other reviews about Penn Community Bank

5.0
29 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Leadership and opportunities to grow

Cons

Pay and no hybrid work for retail

3.0
27 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There is strong opportunity for internal growth. If you are well-liked by management, you can advance quickly within the company. Many people start in one role and move up over time. The coworkers are genuinely great—collaborative, supportive, and many turn into long-term friends. The team culture at the peer level is one of the company’s strongest assets.

Cons

Compensation growth does not align with increased responsibility. Despite holding a leadership role and managing multiple direct reports, my bonus was higher earlier in my tenure than it was in subsequent years, even while consistently receiving “meets and exceeds” performance reviews. There is limited tolerance for dissent. Disagreeing with management or leadership decisions can result in being sidelined or quietly excluded, even for employees who were previously well-regarded. Decision-making is highly top-down. Direction is dictated by the CEO and board, and alternative perspectives are rarely challenged or seriously considered by senior leadership due to fear of pushback. Support for working mothers is lacking. During pregnancy, a professional disagreement led to lasting consequences rather than understanding. After returning from maternity leave, concerns raised about exclusion, retaliation, and reintegration were brought to HR and resulted in feeling dismissed rather than supported. The experience highlighted broader issues with how postpartum employees are treated—particularly when concerns involve senior leadership—and ultimately made it clear that the culture was no longer aligned with my values.

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