A Long Fall From The Top - Anonymous employee Paycom Employee Review

2.0
12 Jan 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Before 2022, Paycom provided me with every goal I wanted to achieve in my adult career. Sure the job was challenging and the corporate structure was stiff, but the life lessons gained from this position were unmeasurable. The pay was incredible for the little experience I had several of my colleagues became family. The job allowed me to travel and learn how to operate as an adult in the corporate world.

Cons

Once the pandemic ended, Paycom seemed to lose focus of all the areas of flexibility in the company that made it great: Remote Work - Paycom led the charge with remote work when the pandemic struck and not only did it make more sense as a software company, but the numbers showed employees in my department were more productive. This changed in 2021 when employees were forced back into the office under the guise of "Culture", which we all know is just another name for micro-management. Culture cannot be forced, regardless of what Chad and other executives like to think. It is unfortunate that Paycom has lost and will continue to lose GOOD and tenured employees by not being flexible when it comes to hybrid and remote work, especially when over 90% of client meetings are online over the phone or via Zoom. Oklahoma Pride - The company holds OKC in the highest of regards and often will prioritize leadership positions for those both internally and externally, as long as the candidates come from Oklahoma. We would often joke you can only move up so far in the company, otherwise, you will get shipped to Oklahoma where not many people want to be relocated. This is unfortunate in several circumstances, and because they are not open to the idea of having satellite HQs outside of OKC (or Grapevine) they have had to lower the bar of who they hire by dropping requirements such as a college degree (which is extremely noticeable when it comes to long-term client care). If Paycom could break down the walls of their corporate centers in OK/TX I believe the company could grow exponentially. Also, can you imagine the talent in dev you could get by expanding outside the Midwest? Unkept Promises - Paycom is notorious for promising things and then changing them with no questions asked (and they will say 'This is the last time we will talk about this'). Whether it be the remote work policy, commission incentives, or promotions to new roles that dissolve before they are started, Paycom has no problem going back on their word to their hard-working employees when they decide they want to go in another direction. This, again, has led to good and tenured employees leaving the company, and it will continue to happen as well. Gallop Surveys - On a self pat on the back, Paycom prides itself on several Gallop Surveys throughout the year to get feedback on the company but turns a complete blind eye to negative results. These surveys may as well not even be sent out because regardless of how many are taken and how negative the feedback can be, they will never be discussed and changes never seem to happen. Chad (CEO) - Regardless of which department head reports to Chad, no one is willing to stand up and voice the truth. It is common knowledge in the company that Chad is unwilling to listen to feedback regarding the changes he makes overnight that do not make sense, and inevitably when things do not go his way employees are the ones to blame. This can be seen especially with Paycom's new BETI deployment which all employees know is not the magical industry change that Chad thinks it is. All metrics steer towards clients using this tool, however, the truth is a vast majority of clients could care less about it, and forcing them to use it is not the way to go about progress. Chad likes to compare Paycom to Apple (and perhaps himself as Steve Jobs), but the truth is, Apple never forced people to use their products, people used them because they were great products. If Paycom wants to truly be the Apple of HRIS, it needs to have better products that people want to use and are not forced to.

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Paycom Response
2y
We are disappointed to read your review. Paycom is built on a values-driven, purpose-first culture that strives to empower all employees to do their best work. We trust being on campus unites our teams by providing an environment that ensures you and other employees are best equipped to succeed. Our leadership team takes all feedback seriously and uses it to improve and enhance the employee experience. We encourage you to reach out to the HR team at hrmgmt@paycomonline.com to share more about your experience.

Explore other reviews about Paycom

5.0
16 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Training, pay, and benefits are really good

Cons

9 hour day is brutal

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Paycom Response
3d
Strong development, competitive compensation and meaningful benefits are part of how we invest in our team, and it's great to see that reflected in your experience. Thank you for sharing!
2.0
17 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Base salary - PTO - Awesome colleagues - $1 Medical PPO offering

Cons

- Upper leadership seem to not value the operations department as much as they do with sales. They are not consistent as well, which causes them to change the entire department's job description, expectations, & commission structure every few months. Change is good but huge change every 3-4 months is so exhausting. - They overload you with too many clients to handle while increasing the number of internal calls. When asking for support from sales or middle management, its typically a hard negotiation or non-existent. Expect to work way over 40 hours/week and juggle 10-20+ clients at a time. - Sales will oversell on product & implementation expectation which makes the job 1000% harder. Turnover with sales is extremely high so don't expect for even the best reps stay as they either leave, get fired because quota was not met, or the new manager will cut them if they're "not the vibe". You get left with the newbies who does not know how to sell or support you when you need them. - Every role in this company has high turnover in general. Making it very hard to cross collaborate with other departments as everyone is either extremely swamped or new to the role and cannot support as well, - Being forced to go to Oklahoma for training every year, sometimes twice a year.

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