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Computer Generated Solutions

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Computer Generated Solutions reviews about "work environment"

28% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

66 reviews
1.0
22 Dec 2025

Not what you expect

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some of the people are cool

Cons

Management is terrible pay is terrible They ask you to go above and beyond for pennies No ability to terminate or suspend people Half the machines are missing task bars Biggest client pays out 3 times the salary of what the company offers for the roles Management leads from behind glass doors and walls Attrition rates for employees is terrible. out of 10 people in the last training class 2 are left. The one prior was 18 and down to 1. Even though MGMT approved OT for you they will say when it comes time to pay that you make too much to qualify for it. Dont offer people a pay for performance and then make them responsible for creating it. Companies that offer pizza parties to build positive culture and or work environments RUN!!!!

5.0
2 July 2025

Good

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good work environment and work culture

Cons

Nothing to mention in this

1.0
29 June 2026

CGS – E.ON Project Review

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

At a company level, CGS is not the worst place I have worked. There are professional people, there are managers who know how to communicate with employees and do their job properly. Unfortunately, my experience on the E.ON project was completely different.

Cons

The atmosphere within this team is, in my opinion, something that should not exist in a professional workplace. When you request time off, instead of receiving a clear and respectful answer, you may end up waiting days and sometimes receiving responses that feel more like mockery than professional communication. Nobody expects every vacation request to be automatically approved, but there is a huge difference between a reasonable refusal with an explanation and an attitude of “if you don’t like it, you can leave”. One of the biggest problems is the lack of support. When you need help, answers can take days or sometimes never come at all. In an already difficult and stressful project, this means you are left alone to figure things out by yourself. At the same time, the pressure for results is constant. What bothered me the most was the lack of respect shown toward employees. I witnessed conversations and comments that have no place in a serious company. This is not about normal jokes between colleagues, it is about attitudes and remarks that make people feel disrespected, ignored, or mocked when they ask for help or request something completely normal, such as taking their vacation. I have seen colleagues reaching exhaustion, constantly stressed, and mentally affected by the atmosphere within the team. When people start coming to work with anxiety and fear that they will be laughed at, criticized unfairly, or treated with superiority, we are no longer talking about a healthy work environment. Another disappointing aspect is the lack of involvement from higher management. The problems are visible to anyone who has worked here long enough, yet the impression is that nobody wants to step in or make real changes. As long as the numbers look good, the employees’ experience seems to become a secondary concern. I am writing this review because what I experienced on this project does not feel like a normal working environment, and people deserve to know what it feels like to work somewhere where pressure and fear seem to be used as management tools. Instead of motivation, support, and communication, I experienced constant pressure, a toxic atmosphere, and an approach based on intimidation. Employees are kept in a constant state of stress, with the feeling that they can be punished at any moment for results, even while working under difficult conditions and earning close to minimum wage. The most disturbing part is the way salary reduction has been presented as a threat if results are not considered good enough. Statements such as, “Those who do not have results, we will reduce their salary so we can give more to those who do”, create fear and insecurity. For someone already working for close to minimum wage, this is not motivation, it is psychological pressure. Employees should not feel threatened with financial punishment as a way of control. In Romania, salary is part of the employment contract, and changes to it are regulated by labor law. It should not be used as a tool to intimidate people or force performance through fear. From my perspective, this type of behavior feels closer to workplace bullying than healthy management. Constant criticism, excessive pressure, comparisons between colleagues, and the feeling that you have to work while constantly afraid directly affect people’s mental health. Employees are not just numbers in performance reports. They are people who come to work every day, try to do their best, and deserve respect, not threats, humiliation, and continuous stress. A healthy workplace should develop people, not mentally exhaust them. Results are achieved through support, training, communication, and respect, not through fear, pressure, and insecurity. Another aspect that shocked me was the way agent evaluations are handled. Monitoring and evaluating calls is completely normal and necessary in a call-center environment. The problem is not the existence of evaluations, the problem is how they are conducted. A proper evaluation should mean transparency, feedback, and professional development. It should include an analysis of the call, strengths, weaknesses, clear explanations of mistakes, and concrete recommendations for improvement. There should be a real discussion between the evaluator and the agent, so mistakes can be understood and corrected. Instead, on this project, the process feels more focused on finding someone to blame rather than helping people improve. You receive an email saying that one of your calls was reviewed at some point. There is no real discussion, no coaching, no follow-up, and no proper explanation about what went wrong and how you can improve in the future. Even worse, individual evaluations are sometimes communicated in front of the entire team. Instead of confidentiality and respect for the employee, mistakes become public, creating the feeling of, “You made a mistake, make sure it does not happen again, otherwise there will be consequences”. If the goal is truly performance improvement, where is the guidance? Where is the coaching? Where is the detailed analysis and support? My impression is that evaluations are used more as a pressure and intimidation tool rather than a professional development tool. An employee does not become better because they are embarrassed in front of colleagues. People improve when they receive clear feedback, support, and practical guidance.

4.0
24 Mar 2025

Good

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

CGS in Saint John Good work environment great team Friendly manager

Cons

Felt a bit like school with mangers tracking in your ins and outs

1.0
5 Dec 2025

Bad Leadership and Pay

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Employees onsite are nice and make the fact you dont make any money not so bad but they are dropping like flies.

Cons

under paid, upper mgmt likes to dangle carrots to promise bonus structure based on metrics but when it comes time to pay they kick the can down the road. You cant fire anyone there so you can basically never show up for work or call in and still have your job. MGMT is ok with you having 2 or 3 jobs to cover your expenses and who cares if you have to travel over an hour to get there daily to be micro managed by an IT staff that cant fix the missing task bars and the super low pay to work on devices that cost more than you make in a month. If you apply and work for a company that thinks pizza parties provides a healthy work environment run.

1.0
8 Jan 2025

Stay away

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some colleagues were genuinely supportive and collaborative, making daily interactions more enjoyable.

Cons

The company has a very old-school culture that feels rigid and outdated. Work/life balance is extremely poor—employees are required to be in the office merely to swipe their badge, which undermines productivity and morale. There is a high level of micromanagement and control, creating a stifling and discouraging work environment. The benefits are subpar and fall significantly short compared to industry standards.

5.0
14 Nov 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

a positive and friendly work environment with supportive and knowledgeable colleagues

Cons

the use of internal tools with little to no documentation.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 66 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,517 Computer Generated Solutions reviews submitted anonymously by Computer Generated Solutions employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Computer Generated Solutions is right for you.