Rawlings Group Reviews

2.6

24% would recommend to a friend

(409 total reviews)

Ryan Little

35% approve of CEO

25% positive business outlook

Rawlings Group has an employee rating of 2.6 out of 5 stars, based on 409 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Rawlings Group employee rating is 28% below average for employers within the Insurance industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

409 reviews
3.0
23 Mar 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

First of all, I’d like to point out that I left voluntarily since one of the administrative posts wanted to imply that all the negative reviews were from people that were fired. Here is my honest review of Rawlings after being there for several years and voluntarily leaving after contemplating my worth as an employee and individual. My first pro is the vast majority of the direct managers (team managers) that I had experience were great, understanding, just wanting to help. I had one bad manager and she is no longer there. The other pro is that I feel like HR has been listening to the bad reviews and really trying to make a difference in the employee culture and providing a lot of events (pre-COVID) and implementing Rawlings Cares initiatives which are all employee centric measures to improve employee morale and it’s the thought that counts for me and those things helped improve my outlook on Rawlings.

Cons

The biggest reason that I left Rawlings were for certain benefits so if these benefits don’t affect you, then it may be worth to consider Rawlings for employment. The following benefits were very important for me and were a main contributing factor in why I left. There is no paid parental leave, 401k matching is almost non existent since the match is so low, and I wanted the option for full remote. For the topic of working remotely, during COVID, Rawlings had to come up with a remote option as did any other company that wanted to stay operational. Employees had to provide their own equipment (laptops, internet, keyboards, etc) and were not compensated in any way. (plus this occurred after being told that our business model required us to be in office which never made any sense and that was proven to be untrue as they were able to figure out a way when they had to). After much turnover and unhappiness from the employees about having to return to the office full time, they have now offered a remote hybrid option. However, you still have to provide your own equipment (they even sent out a supplies list and how much each thing would be-probably about $400 worth) plus, at least for the mean time, its 2 weeks at home, 2 weeks in the office. That sounds like a torturous limbo to me to have to finally get in a routine at home and then have to go back into the office. Also there were metric related requirements in order to be eligible to work from home as well as continue working from home (well for half of each month). They said 80% of the employees would qualify for that but I feel like that number was incorrect or maybe just everyone I knew was in that 20%… The last thing that I would like to talk about is the salary. I was told in my interview that the average salary after bonuses (which are almost like a commission) was something like $70k or some huge number like that (the base is currently $47k). However I also feel that the number is inaccurate. I would like to know if that is excluding outliers and how old that number is, because we lost one of our biggest clients about 2 years ago and I know everyone’s recoveries reflected that. Your bonusing potential depends on what kind of files are getting put in your queue but even more so on what your client mix is. Even if you hit your invoicing requirements, some clients are notorious for not getting recoveries to you so even if you did everything correctly, it might be harder for you to see that money than if someone else has the exact same situation but with a different client. I know that for me, I usually made very little over the base salary.

2.0
22 Feb 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- depending which department, above average pay. Low end salary but unlimited commission - beautiful, clean, scenic facility - decent health insurance - large company so you meet a lot of nice people - on site cafe, gym and coffee shop

Cons

- the pay can be great but it can also suck. Depends on what clients you are given, what specialized team you're on, what kind of work you're getting daily and how good/fast you are doing the job. They hire people in with an unrealistic expectation as to what their salary will be. While the salary can be great and above average, most people never achieve that level of commissions and are disappointed. - they do not value employee retention. AT ALL. Do not ever expect to feel valued or respected or get a pat on the back for staying with them 20 years. The only thing you'll get is an extra 5 days vacation (after 5 years) and a Rolex watch (after 15 years) which is nice, but not a whole lot to look forward to. You are maxed at 4 client accesses, so once you have your 4 accesses after 2 years, you'll never get another new client. NEVER. There is zero advantage to staying long term, unless the reason is just because you want to. Old man Rawlings refers to employees as "cows" because he can herd them in then herd them right back out. - no loyalty, unless you kiss butt to anyone in a higher up position. Even then, everyone stabs everyone in the back. Office politics are horrible and a lot of times unethical. You have directors who "direct" family members, you have higher ups having relationships with their subordinates, managers that talk about team members to other employees within ear shot.....terrible culture. And the morale reflects it. Very negative 8am meetings EVERY SINGLE DAY to tell you what you did wrong the day before, how much you need to do today, etc. it honestly makes you wish you would have just stayed home in bed! - you must work, work, work. They don't like people having fun, forming friendships, or socializing. That only means you're missing out on a few dollars you could have invoiced during those 10 minutes. Managers and co-workers are like spy's, everyone tattle tales on everyone like they are in kindergarten and it's totally unprofessional. The culture makes people be that way, which is unfortunate. - training is awful. Recent trainers have been TERRIBLE and I think the work and turn over rate reflects it. No one says anything about it though because no one really gives a heck what you think. Just sit down and do your job. - human resources is awful. They violate more rules and ethics than anywhere else in the building. They are the laughing stock among employees. Don't go there if you need help or advice, unless you want fired or you just want to be their topic of conversation for the day. - constant fear of losing your job. No matter what department or title, people wonder everyday if that will be the day it ends. Rawlings in stills this fear in people. It likes for you to feel like that. They hang your job over your head day in and day out because of production, time off or they just don't like you. It's sad. Also no succession plan when the big guy passes away, so no one has a clue what to expect next. - zero flex time or ability to work remotely from home. There never will be. No headphones. - hope you can drive in a blizzard because you either make it there (on time) or you use a personal vacation day. THE PLACE NEVER CLOSES.

1.0
27 Jan 2022

Warning.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Money. The fact when you quit they don’t make you work out a two weeks notice allowing you a quick escape.

Cons

Although some of these negative reviews may be “poorly written” it doesn’t take away from the fact they’re absolutely true. Some of these positive reviews reek of upper management BS and their classism and holier than thou attitude truly shines through. Rawlings is a hot pot of toxicity where employees are pitted against one another and threatened with consequences like losing your job, being demoted, or the dreaded meeting with upper management for the most minimal of mistakes. So you made the company 3 million dollars last year but missed 1 thousand? Shame on you for being so lazy! Do your job better! Here’s hours of busy work that make absolutely no difference in your job- but do that on top of your work and DO BETTER. You’re treated like garbage for lack of a better term and are nothing more than a body in a chair. I’ve read a review that mentions that Rawlings has a great employee retention rate over the past 10 years- true. However, what they fail to mention is that over the past two years (due to major company and management changes as well as the company’s true colors shining through due to the pandemic) people are dropping like FLIES and they are scrambling (and tripling the employee referral bonus) to get people to work for them. The micromanagement is extreme, and unless you want 50+ emails a day of people sifting through your work from YEARS past and pointing out minor mistakes- this isn’t the job for you. If you prioritize mental health, this job isn’t for you. If you stand for equality, fair treatment, and overall good virtue- this company isn’t for you. Please do yourself a favor and stay away, I wish I had. I hope this review is written well enough for whichever member of upper management is obsessed with reading these reviews and putting others down for insignificant flaws.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 409 Reviews

Glassdoor has 427 Rawlings Group reviews submitted anonymously by Rawlings Group employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Rawlings Group is right for you.