Working Solutions Reviews

3.6

71% would recommend to a friend

(487 total reviews)
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Kim Houlne

75% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

Working Solutions has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 487 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Working Solutions employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Human resources and staffing industry (3.8 stars).

Reviews by job title

487 reviews
2.0
27 Aug 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Very nice management. I think It may be possible for someone that just needs something part-time without having to worry about money or hours then possibly this may be a fit. Perhaps someone homebound without kids at home.

Cons

I switched careers and didn’t really know where to work next. So I worked on two different programs for them. I guess I cannot say the names but it was for senior living and also a famous craft store. I have a Bachelors Degree and most people I worked with did as well. The training on both programs was very hard. You need to be tech savvy because it’s self setup and the IT at this company is not good. There is not a person to speak too. You have to put in a ticket and get an email back which 75% of the time has nothing to with helping you and is something you have already tried. If your down your screwed. For training you need to have two random weeks off without getting paid or working elsewhere for each program. My biggest problem with being a contractor is that first off the pay totally sucked. I ended up leaving after finding something making triple what I did here with benefits and frankly the job is easier. They hire highly skilled service and sales reps. I had been in sales and service for over 20 years and found these jobs difficult because you have to be a robot but not sound like a robot. They monitor you to say the same exact thing correctly each and every time which is extremely difficult it you actually are listening to customers and answering their concerns. I would constantly get dinged for not being empathetic enough at a certain spot or missing a word here or there which was incredibly stressful to me because you are always worried you will get fired. If your not perfect then you have to attend all these extra training sessions unpaid where they go over the exact same stuff over and over. The craft store was a bit more lenient but the problem there was that you only got paid if you were on the phone w a cust. And there was so much after call work that you had to do that you got paid peanuts on that the pay totally stank. You are gonna work Holidays. You are going To work nights. You are going to work weekends. Your breaks are not paid. So you are thinking big deal I can handle that. Well actually no. Each contract you pick up is a min. Of 20 hours. There is always something that happens tech wise or gee I don’t know you have to pee. So you need to schedule 21-22 hours per contract or you will get fired. It also takes 15min to log on to their system. So for each 15 min break you have to schedule 30 min. You will die if you don’t schedule a break every two to three hours because the work is very hard and monotonous. So say you schedule in total a half hour for lunch a half hour for dinner and one other half hour break. Also throw in when they release hours it is like a pack of wild hyenas fighting for time. So usually you can’t get big chunks of time. It was awful. So then you get stuck with weekend hours. On the senior living project if you didn’t make VIP which is not easy you then schedule after everyone else and get stuck with crap! So flexible? Eh not really. My average week was me starting at 8:30 am and four to five nights a week until 9 pm and then also either a Saturday or Sunday. I though I would have more time with my family and I never saw them. My family hated me working here. Absolutely zero work life balance. I was always stressed and always rushed! Also if you want a day off now you drop below 20 hours a week and have to make that day up! The only way you can take off time is by scheduling 7 consecutive days off. Total BS. Who can do that? It’s unpaid anyways. My advice is really think about this one before you jump in.

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Working Solutions Response
6y
We appreciate you taking the time to write a very detailed review of why things didn't work out well for you. Since this is a contractor position several of the recommendations you mention cannot be done as that would qualify as an employee, and then you couldn't select the hours you want to work. So as we know everything has trade-offs. I am glad you found something better for you.
5.0
23 Aug 2016

Customer Service Rep

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

This is the most professional work at home company I've ever worked for. There are no fees for background checks or training. The staff is amazing from the CEO to the trainers. Training is not long and drawn out like other WAH companies. And the support while working is amazing. Pay is always on time and the systems we use are user friendly and regularly up and available. I could be more happy or grateful to be a part of this sensational company.

Cons

I have absolutely no cons.

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Working Solutions Response
9y
Thank you so much for your review and feedback! We really appreciate and value all your kind words. We are so thankful to you and all of our agents that do such an outstanding job supporting our clients. Thank you for what you do for Working Solutions! And please tell your friends...we always need great agents, and you can get a referral fee too!
1.0
20 Feb 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you land on a good project, the pay can be decent. If you land on a good project, the hours can be great. If you land on a good project, the management can be wonderful.

Cons

If you land on a bad project, the pay is atrocious, and almost insulting. Especially when you are literally tracking minutes for pennies, and heaven forbid there is a technical outage beyond your control. While they say if it is a "global" issue, they will compensate, they do not always do so. If you land on a bad project, they are hounding you, sending notices, and posting on Vyne about meeting hours minimums, or you'll "removed from the project", and work adherence, and schedule adherence issues, even though they are begging you to GIVE BACK the hours they originally pushed you into grabbing! It is asinine to me. "HOURS HAVE BEEN RELEASED, GO! GO! GO! YOU MUST MEET YOUR MINIMUM OF 20 HOURS, PER YOUR CONTRACT WHEN YOU AGREED TO WORK THIS PROJECT!" And then they ask you to give back hours, and forget to take that into consideration before sending out notices about weekly & monthly schedule, work, and hours adherence. It really is very frustrating, and honestly used to send me into near panics! If you land on a bad project, you are stuck with a management team that is unaware of how to make the phone calls for that particular client (they aren't even trained on what the client expects! blind leading the blind!), utilize the systems (even their own!!!). They are completely out of touch with what it is like to be an IC, and have absolutely no empathy for the struggles that some projects are. There are some within management that NEVER return emails or calls. And when you drive it up the food chain, their project managers sweep it under the rug. They ALWAYS defend their management team, and assume the IC is at fault. No loyalty to the agent community. Turn over rate is incredibly high.

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Working Solutions Response
7y
We always appreciate honest feedback good and bad and share it with the rest of the management team. We do appreciate our agents and listen to them, sorry you feel differently. Good luck going forward.
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