Not a bad company, but run by the home office in Australia, so not much chance for advancement - Anonymous employee EGR Group Employee Review

3.0
7 Sept 2013
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Smart people, both in the US and Australia. As a rule, they make high quality products and are not afraid to try new markets.

Cons

Takes forever to get things done because of all the back and forth with the headquarters. In some cases, the influences of the people at the home offices are stronger than the voices of the customer, or those dealing directly with the customer. They wouldn't stand behind the products they sold, or make changes to the product to remedy bad fit.

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5.0
2 Aug 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Those that speak up are listened too. Focus on continuous improvement. Great improvements in employee engagement and empowerment.

Cons

IT support is based in Head Office (Australia). Seems to take forever to get system issues or improvements addressed.

2.0
24 May 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

On the whole, the working people were OK, easy to get along with and cooperative. The pay was just OK, and one could do a lot worse in the SEMA realm; most SEMA member companies are underfunded amateur-hour hobbies/passions-turned-businesses, and EGR is run as a business, which should be a good thing.

Cons

The US office is not really run as a profit center, more as a distribution/cost center. The goal of minimizing costs drives the culture, and there is a lot of turnover. Even the biggest customers complain that they would get a new coordinator about every six months, and the cycle - new customer rep starts, being sometimes introduced by the current person, sometimes not - get-acquainted - define the problems - begin to solve them - person quits or gets canned, - new person starts - rinse, repeat forever Some might find the almost second-nature Aussie use of profanity used in the workplace a bit uncomfortable. If so, either understand up front that it isn't meant in a bad way or directed as an insult or even at you, but more as just their dialect - or go elsewhere. It just isn't such a big deal.

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