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National Field Network

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National Field Network Reviews

2.0

27% would recommend to a friend

(96 total reviews)

Shari Nott

29% approve of CEO

21% positive business outlook

National Field Network has an employee rating of 2.0 out of 5 stars, based on 96 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a poor working experience there. The National Field Network employee rating is 47% below average for employers within the Real estate industry (3.8 stars).

Reviews by job title

96 reviews
1.0
9 Mar 2016

My Fifth Year of College

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I worked here for nearly a year, and had positions in two different departments. I first started as a full-time employee in an entry level position in a department that was essentially a call center. The environment was fast-paced, the people were entertaining, and it had a kind of rewarding feel to finish the day when you got a lot done. They had a number of "employee reward programs" with varying levels of enthusiasm and involvement. I enjoyed spinning the wheel, the large Friday meetings, and Friday morning bagels. They do a decorating/costume contest for each major Holiday. My superiors in this part of the company knew how to motivate their workers very well, encouraged them to take on larger responsibilities, and helped get them involved. I actually really enjoyed my time at the company while I was on this side, and am still grateful for the experience. Also, the starting wages for this area are very good for what are essentially data-entry and phone-call based jobs. After a few months, I was transferred out of the large "open-office" departments and into IT (my manager went out of her way to help me advance in the company). In the first few weeks I learned quite a lot, and the department seemed open to ideas. The main difference between this department and all the others was the age of the people I worked with. Whereas I had previously been working mostly with people that were under 30 or 35, this department had an average age over 50. Everyone was nice and generally got along pretty well.

Cons

Despite my overall positive experience while working in the open-office area, there were quite a number of mentionable things that will probably haunt NFN for a long time. While I named a few "employee reward programs" that were enjoyable above, that is really the extent of the company policies that I would consider worth having. In fact, most of the company policies were eerily reminiscent of the poorly-thought, overly-strict list of rules that my RAs enforced back when I was living on-campus at college. Hence the title of my review. The PTO system they have seems to have been taken right out of a corporate playbook from the 1890s: rather than getting a set amount of vacation days, your PTO is accumulated by pay period. This creates a multitude of problems, one of them being you can't really plan vacations in advance because you need to strategically use PTO time over an extended period of time to accumulate enough days to do so. Furthermore, your sick time and vacation time both come from the SAME accumulated time. This means that if you do save up enough time for vacation and get it approved, if you get sick a few weeks before or after that vacation you may not have enough PTO time to take off for your health. Once you start taking unpaid days off, you are more likely to be viewed negatively by management. On top of that, add a Human Resources department hamstrung by terrible policies, miscommunication, and elitist attitudes. I remember a fellow employee hypothesizing that the policies were at a kindergarten level due to so many young people working there that needed "professional direction." In reality, however, the most likely reason for the archaic policies would be the high employee turn-over rate that creates a "revolving door" type feel. It didn't take me longer than just a week or two of working at NFN to notice the extremely high number of employee "restructures," a passcode that changed a minimum once a month (due to people getting laid off), and constant new hires. It didn't seem like there were very many people outside of upper management that actually seemed to want, or think they could have, a long-term career opportunity with NFN. Aside from their horrendous company policies, most of my criticism is aimed towards the IT department management, and the authoritarian vice-grip the CEO exerted on general processes. The company's ability to communicate business needs into technical specifications is, shockingly, in even worse shape then their policies. Unnecessarily complex bureaucratic processes prevent any meaningful attempts at actually improving anything! They use a programming language first created in 1959 and last updated in the early 2000s. I genuinely put effort into doing great work for my first few months in IT. Overtime, though, I grew extremely apathetic toward the whole situation. If it wasn't for my own prerogative, my entire experience in NFN's IT department would be wasted time. Additionally, from the very beginning of my time in IT I was caught in something of an unstated turf war between my immediate boss and his superior. At times this made it confusing on which direction to go in, as they were both attempting to slyly undermine one another. This is definitely NOT a place to go if you are an IT specialist seeking a good-paying, long-term, self-rewarding position.

1.0
3 Mar 2015

Demeaning

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

None, anymore well, besides schedule flexibility.

Cons

I think the fact that we have to clock out in order to use the restroom of get a cup of water is not only insane but it is demeaning. Everyone that is employed here are all of legal age, whether it be 18 or 40+ so the reason we are being monitored as if we are a criminal under house arrest with an ankle monitor is beyond me. It is so difficult because most people here need this job to be able to live and support their families; I feel the company whether it be HR, management or whomever take advantage of this and use it as an opportunity to crack the whip so to speak. I understand if someone breaks the rules (using a cell phone excessively, being rude and inappropriate...) however, to tell employees that they have to clock out to use the restroom, they can't stand up, they can't speak, they aren't allowed to take any days off in April so on and so forth is utterly appalling and all together juvenile. Almost everyone that I ever speak with in this company are looking for another job because this place is so condescending to us as adults. Be a little less like Malcolm X and a lot more like Martin Luther King Jr.

avatar
National Field Network Response
11y
Employees are not "clocking out" in order to use the restroom or get a drink of water. They are simply recording that they are away from their desk, so that no calls get forwarded to you if you are not available. Nobody takes advantage of the fact that an employee needs their job. We understand that everybody depends on their job in order to support their families, however that has nothing to do with ensuring that company guidelines and policies and procedures are being followed. The only reason an employee cannot request time off in April would be because the volume in their department will be increasing and we will need all hands on deck.
1.0
28 Jan 2016

Team Lead

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some of your Co-workers are amazing, some managers/supervisors are great people and will help you with anything, other than that there is not too much good here.

Cons

Some management (especially upper management), sucks! They don't care about how their employees feel. The people who run this company have no remorse in making a hard working employee cry her eyes out in the bathroom. Whether you work hard or barely work, nothing is ever good enough for some of these people that run the company. When doors are closed for 2 hour "meetings", the worst things are said about employees. There is no respect at this company from some of the managers/supervisors. If you are more than 7 minutes late you get in trouble, yet managers walk in whenever they want, and leave 3 hours later because they are on salary pay. After two years of working there, I made 25 cents more than brand new employees and I helped restructure a department that was crumbling, and I worked my butt off to make sure things were done correctly and everything was written down step by step procedure wise for any other employee that wanted to see how it was done. My 2nd year review was 2 months late, and when I did the math, if I got my review on time with my raise, I should have had $3,100 more in my account, but NFN doesn't back pay because they don't appreciate their hard working employees. Also, the day of my review, I was written up for a small error, NOTE TO MANAGEMENT: you cannot pile up huge projects on one person and give them small deadlines- IT DOES NOT WORK THAT WAY, MISTAKES WILL BE MADE!!! Some managers do everything to help you, and some sit on their computer reading news articles. This is the most stressful place to work, I've watched people breakdown in the parking lot. Which also brings me to unfair treatment of employees. As a previous employee of this company, I costed the company a few hundred dollars on a mistake, where there are two other employees that continuously cost the company THOUSANDS of dollars in errors, with no punishment to them, yet I got written up for my mistake. DO NOT WORK HERE, IT IS THE MOST STRESSFUL ATMOSPHERE I HAVE EVER BEEN IN (and I left the company on good terms).

avatar
National Field Network Response
10y
National Field Network will always retro the employee's salary increase in the event that the review is behind. It is a falsehood to accuse the company of not providing back pay to their employees. There are weekly meetings with managers and supervisors, and no one is ever called out by name in regards to their work performance. Human resources sits in on those meetings and will not allow employees to be talked about in front of other employees. If an employee makes a mistake, then they will be addressed regarding it. There is no way for employees to know who gets addressed and who does not. That is an assumption made by many who think that they are the only ones who are addressed. Employees do not have any right to know any other employees business. Those matters are confidential. It is not the CEO who makes employees cry in the bathroom. The company cannot control the emotions of its employees. What the company can do is support our employees in their work performance and provide honest feedback to them in a respectful manner. The company seeks to help its employees grow and develop into leaders.
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Glassdoor has 107 National Field Network reviews submitted anonymously by National Field Network employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if National Field Network is right for you.