Parseq Reviews

3.3

62% would recommend to a friend

(109 total reviews)

Rami Cassis

87% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Parseq has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 109 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Parseq employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management and consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

109 reviews
2.0
22 June 2017

Avoid if possible.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The staff there can be great and the people I met in training were some of the nicest people I've met in my life. Some of the campaigns like the EDF outbound campaign are fine and treat the employees relatively well. The pay is above minimum wage which is nice for call centre work. The trainer was probably one of the best trainers I've ever met she was called Amy and she put the rest of the company to shame.

Cons

Employee care does not exist. I'm not talking about the newbies, I'm talking about everybody from trainers to team leaders to management. EDF are essentially Parseq overlords if you're on that campaign and what they say goes. The client for example wishes everybody in a call centre to come to work in a smart shirt, trousers and shoes- why this is necessary I will never know. On dress down days which normally happen on a Friday, people are sent home if they wear certain things like tracksuit bottoms or shorts- not my kind of fashion personally but to each their own, people should not be sent home for dressing down on a dress down day. The computers in the company are downright awful and are running an out of date operating system which is no longer security supported by Microsoft so customer information is ripe for the taking. The call floor has no air conditioning and in hot weather in smart clothes some people almost bake to death. I've heard of times where people literally have passed out. When in training your team can be thrown onto the call floor and be first time diallers without completing the training which is both unprofessional and terrifying and the floor walkers are 50/50 helpful though the information they give advisers tends to be different depending on who you ask. Some people I know who applied for the inbound position were moved straight onto Smart Meters Outbound which is more of a Godsend but still a con as that was not what they applied for. The tests in training which they force you to pass are an utter joke- you have to get a high percentage and they're an annoying 'tick all that apply' tests which are very easy to get wrong even if you have the knowledge. And if all of that wasn't enough there are a few more caveats to mention. -Some members of staff still haven't been given headsets so they're forced to use hand phones all day which I imagine goes against health and safety promoting RSI. -The Security guards believe that they're Gods and will nastily penalise anyone for anything, not even responding to a friendly hello. -The training software for the system never worked in training so the first time we used the system was when we went live on the floor. I could go on but you get the picture.

1.0
16 May 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I was in the Glasgow campus for British Gas. Made some really great friends through my training group, our trainer was amazing! On site gym and canteen

Cons

Never even made it out of grad bay. QA scoring was far too strict. The day I was supposed to leave grad bay (after 8 weeks which was originally meant to be 4) my manager approached me and advised I will not be leaving due to my QA scoring not being at the required 90% I asked what my score was and it was in fact 89%!! After this my manager failed one of my sale calls which was my first fail in over 5 weeks through no fault of my own it was the customer who advised she has a prepayment meter when actually she had a credit meter and this meant I was not allowed on the phone for 5 days so I was sitting for 8 hours each day listening to the same call on the system day in day out due to being banned from dialling. On the Friday afternoon I was taken into a room and given a letter from my manager saying that on Monday morning at 11:30am I will be undergoing a probation review meeting due to the failed call, this worried me and i had already highlighted to HR that I have bad anxiety so this made me have a panic attack at my desk and my manager took me aside and advised me that I've not to worry about the meeting and my job is safe and sent me home to calm down and enjoy my weekend. The Monday morning came and I went into work feeling that the meeting was just a warning but unfortunately I was taken into the room and released from the company due to the outcome of the call. I feel that this was a very unfair outcome as there was evidence to prove I was not constantly failing calls. I am not the only person this has happened to, there was at least 5 people who had the exact same experience in grad bay the exact same week.

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Glassdoor has 120 Parseq reviews submitted anonymously by Parseq employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Parseq is right for you.