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Princeton Property Management

Engaged employer

Princeton Property Management Reviews

3.7

65% would recommend to a friend

(67 total reviews)

Amy Gross

82% approve of CEO

62% positive business outlook

Princeton Property Management has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 67 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Princeton Property Management employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Real estate industry (3.8 stars).

Reviews by job title

67 reviews
2.0
26 Jan 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexibility, decent pay, many opportunities. My direct supervisor is amazing but I wouldn’t work for anyone else in the company.

Cons

There is no transparency. People are fired with no warnings. If someone is not performing or there are issues please just be open and honest about it so they can learn. Most people at the corporate office are so cliquey, gossip constantly, and if you don’t get in good with them instantly you are doomed in the company.

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Princeton Property Management Response
5y
We are sorry to hear your experience wasn't a good one, if you'd like to share more information please email us directly at info@princetonproperty.com.
1.0
25 Mar 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are a lot of great co-workers. The hours were flexible.

Cons

They promote and reward managers who practice verbally and emotionally abusive behaviors, as well as managers who act obsequiously. Upper management rarely verbalizes appreciation for lower level employees. When they do verbalize it, their actions speak volumes compared to their words and it’s been proven time and time again that they truly don’t care about dedicated hard working employees. They reward sycophants generously. Manager of the year can be bought with coffee and doughnuts for the corporate office staff. Managers and maintenance techs are forced to take online training that most (if not all) corporate employees should take, but don’t. Courses on how to treat coworkers and employees; how not to be discriminatory; how to be tactful via email message and successfully communicate with other employees; and time management, yet few corporate employees practice or are capable of doing any of the previously mentioned abilities. Managers are often held to a higher standard than their superiors. Many times, community managers questions and concerns go ignored and unanswered. In response to the current pandemic, this company put on a mandatory meeting for all employees (200+) putting hundreds if not thousands at risk. Calling in sick lead to intimidation tactics via text message even though the employee was coughing with a headache. This “mandatory meeting” could have been done virtually, but they care so little for their employees health and well being that they put everyone working for the company and in the Tigard community at risk. The corporate office put a safety net in place for full time employees by converting their vacation time to paid sick leave, when asked what they would do for part time employees they ignored the question and are seemingly planning to leave part timers to fend for themselves. They pay females much less than their male counter parts. Female employees living onsite have their rent increased more than their male counter parts (I.e. a female in the portfolio will get a $60 rent increase, and a male will get a $20 increase). They offer newly hired assistant managers a higher wage than some of their employees who have been employed for 3-4 years, and when hiring for corporate positions they offer out of network males a higher hourly wage than highly qualified females already employed by the company. The top 1% of this corporation makes 100k+ salaries combined and tens of thousands of dollars in bonuses and benefits, while lower level employees are dependent upon the local food banks Princeton donates to just to feed their family and still pay rent.

1.0
22 July 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great benefits and they match 30% of your 401K contributions.

Cons

They like to discriminate against pregnant women with medical issues. The communication sucks you never know if your doing the right thing. They lie and don’t keep their word or follow through with what they say they are gong to do. They are cheap they don’t pay much for the type of work you do. They don’t tell you a lot of things that you should know but you don’t know and they get mad over it

Viewing 1 - 3 of 67 Reviews

Glassdoor has 67 Princeton Property Management reviews submitted anonymously by Princeton Property Management employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Princeton Property Management is right for you.