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Ocean Network Express

Is this your company?

Hired But forced out by Con Man - Executive Ocean Network Express Employee Review

1.0
5 July 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

None, Good infrastructure, facility, chairs and tables.

Cons

They hire Con Man and Fraudsters. On the face of it everything will be OK but when you get close to tenured people you will get to know the extent of the fraudulent activities. It is not just siding with favorite. It is higher management is messed up that they get easily manipulated with Con Artists and they do not even know about the same. Best of luck if you have a good experience here. It will be hard to find. Some of the Con Man's will break the chair and never leave the organization but also contribute negatively. However, From outward look of these people will be very supportive and helpful but they are self centered, boastful and Con Man's working. Hence, this organization have a chain of hiring people but not allowing them to stay. The few who stay eventually are in fraudulent and Con artist activities.

Explore other reviews about Ocean Network Express

5.0
10 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

people are nice and good

Cons

salary is a bit low

1.0
21 Dec 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Hybrid schedule (3 days in office)

Cons

Black professionals considering the Richmond, VA office should proceed with caution. There is little to no Black representation in leadership outside of lower-level management, despite qualified internal talent. This directly impacts visibility, advancement, and access to opportunity. HR is not a safe or neutral resource; mentorship and development programs exist largely in name only and are influenced by favoritism rather than merit, including inconsistent access to tools and resources required to perform effectively. Work is frequently minimized publicly while being relied upon privately, creating an environment where competence is exploited rather than developed, and communication is reactive and driven by optics rather than strategy. For Black employees in particular, this creates a high-risk, unsafe environment where merit does not reliably translate to support or growth. The lack of Black representation in leadership is not an oversight, it is a systemic issue. Decisions around hiring, pay, mentorship, and access to tools consistently favor proximity and likability over merit, resulting in underqualified leadership overseeing highly qualified teams. HR’s failure to act as a neutral safeguard reinforces inequity rather than correcting it, leaving Black employees unsupported when concerns arise. Until accountability, equitable resourcing, and merit-based development are treated as priorities rather than optics, this office will continue to lose strong talent and damage its credibility internally and externally. All in all, I would not recommend the Richmond, VA office for Black candidates and would instead suggest the NJ, GA, IL, or CA offices.

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