Not a "Best Place to Work" - Anonymous employee Synergis Employee Review

1.0
22 Oct 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Decent benefits and time-off policy. Overall Co-workers are nice and good to work with.

Cons

They claim to be "different" than the competition, but do absolutely nothing to differentiate from the numerous competitors doing the exact same thing. There is an extremely old school, "Yes" man mentality, as mentioned in previous reviews. If you come in with any new ideas, it's highly unlikely that anything will ever come of them. The company is far too sales oriented. I understand the staffing industry is obviously catered towards salesmen, but there are so many opportunities missed due to a narrow focus on the bottom line and nothing else. Virtually no growth unless you want to go into sales, and very difficult to get any sort of base compensation increase.

Explore other reviews about Synergis

5.0
10 Aug 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Very communicative and systems are at finger tips.

Cons

None really that I can think of.

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Synergis Response
10mo
So glad to hear you've had a positive experience - it's what we are constantly striving for! Thanks for taking the time to write a review. Leona Rapelye, SVP/HR
2.0
17 June 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Excellent training and development opportunities, particularly for those new to staffing and recruiting. Many talented recruiters and account managers who genuinely cared about their clients, candidates, and teammates. For many years, the company had a strong culture that encouraged collaboration and loyalty.

Cons

The culture changed dramatically in recent years as leadership priorities shifted. Long-tenured employees who had consistently delivered results felt increasingly undervalued, leading to significant turnover. Performance management became heavily focused on numbers without sufficient consideration for market conditions, client changes, hiring freezes, or other factors outside of a recruiter's control. Communication from executive leadership often felt reactive rather than supportive, creating an environment driven more by pressure than partnership. Decisions regarding promotions and leadership appointments raised concerns among employees about experience, qualifications, and overall direction of the company. Employee feedback appeared to carry less weight than it had in previous years, contributing to declining morale and trust.

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