Admiral Group Reviews

3.7

66% would recommend to a friend

(1,213 total reviews)
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Milena Mondini de Focatiis

78% approve of CEO

66% positive business outlook

Admiral Group has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 1,213 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Admiral Group employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Insurance industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
7 Oct 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Loose Work Culture, Working Hours

Cons

So, in essence, you need to ask yourself whether you belong at Admiral Group or not. They do not hire top talent because they are not given the money for it, and you need to be very careful about going someplace you will not fit in. Unfortunately, this was my tale. I wanted to write a very acerbic review, and I certainly had the material for it, but at the end of the day, I realized that I parted ways with the organisation at my discretion, because we were not compatible with each other. I am a very energetic, hard-working individual who is extremely well qualified, and who seeks qualifications and improvements wherever they exist (that is not hyperbole, that is fact). As Admiral does not hire top talent, I was not able to communicate effectively with anyone and felt extraordinarily out of place at the organisation. People began acting ugly around me because they could not match my productivity or the pride I took in my work, and attempted to force me out and/or lower my standing via rumours, running gags, jokes at my expense, so on and so forth (and believe me when I say that I have enough incidents I could repeat here to get a few people fired). I want to be nice here and be very careful to say that I don't blame the people that work in this organisation, because I do not hold ill-will for them, but you, the reader, need to be very mindful of what is likely to happen if you're one type of person in a very different type of environment. Off of my soapbox, the organisation has a disingenuous practice of paying their employees very little, and then pushing the idea of a happy workplace that everybody seems to have bought into. Its nonsense. They compensate poor pay with throwaway gestures like free fruit, and gym membership, while they rack the savings into their annual profit figures. I don't want to use strong terms like this, but the company is organised like a sweatshop - a good-looking sweatshop, but a sweatshop nevertheless. The building is completely open-plan, with the bosses sat right by their teams, and their bosses watching right behind them, like overseers in factories. They spin this as something that fosters good communication, which it may well do, but I suspect what it's really about is keeping an eye on the employees. It's an almost creepy feeling you get talking to some of the employees - everybody feels underpaid, nobody wants to be there (not really), but everybody seems happy, like they've been brainwashed into thinking that way, because they've been given free fruit every single workday and their manager is right by their side to remind them of this fact in case anybody acts up. I don't know, there's certainly something to be said as to the quality of the facilities, but Admiral doesn't invest in its people, and its a point that's always brought up but nothing's done about it, as though its a part of the plan. They roll out food for people at the end of the month because the implication is that they've spent all of their money. If the employees were paid properly, first, there wouldn't be the money to give out food, and secondly, they would in theory then have the money to feed themselves at the end of the month. For a company that says how much of a people business it is, it sure sounds like it's trying to compensate for something. I think that thing might be employee pay, and I think that's why they say that they're a people-driven business to begin with.

1.0
15 Dec 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There really isn’t much to say. Poor pay. Poor Holidays. Mythical share scheme for the senior people that has no control. Under resourced. Over stretched. Some seriously unhappy people here.

Cons

I found it very chaotic, nothing written down and secret coffee clubs where all the family decisions are made as mates hire their mates and the favourite run amok I found most Senior Leaders lacked empathy or sympathy but loved talking about themselves and what lovely new car they just bought. I found that most teams are overloaded with grads and a merry go round from nearby banks emptying their poor performing staff.

1.0
9 Apr 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The pay is OK, but the stock 'options' you are offered are worthless unless you stay 2-3 years from the time you receive them and are clawed back when you leave; vapor asset.

Cons

There is currently a push to have employees sign over their rights to Facebook, Twitter and any other social media site they're currently using. Management is violating basic privacy rights through the collection, use and storage of information that is personal in nature. Therefore, I implore my peers who read this to please open a case with the privacy commissioner based on the following: Work and my life outside of work is now being vetted. Pushed upon me as as "Work-blending' as pressure tactics are in place to force employees to spend time outside of work with their managers. I have a family, and I’m not interested in ‘hanging out’ with supervisor outside of work with a friendly threat of being fired if I do not. There are also a lot of instances whereby management are in a position of power and are exerting their influence to force relationships with employees. If someone from the labor board or privacy commissioner’s office read this, please investigate.

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Glassdoor has 1,321 Admiral Group reviews submitted anonymously by Admiral Group employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Admiral Group is right for you.