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Roar Promotions

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Roar Promotions Reviews

2.0

28% would recommend to a friend

(7 total reviews)
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Rory O’ Farrell

Not enough data to show CEO approval

19% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

7 reviews
1.0
15 June 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You learn to be a confident communicator and friendly. How to approach people with a positive attitude. Finally how to stop people in the street without looking as desperate as a charity fundraiser.

Cons

You don't get paid for 3 months, work 9hrs 6days a week on commission and you pay for your own travel for all work venues. Your expected to give 110% everyday with a smile. There is little compassion if your sick, bereaved or have a sick family member. There is an appearance of easy money to be made, the truth is after 2 years you can afford one months rent/mortgage payment.

4.0
9 Nov 2011

great company to work for

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

you get given the opportunity to learn how the business runs from the early stages with the company opportunities for promotion

Cons

sometimes the working hours are a little too long and might become a barrier between your career and your personal needs

1.0
22 July 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Colleagues - many of the individuals you work with are genuinely lovely people. Diversity - high throughput, they can't be picky. If you're a top-tier salesperson, you could make good money, but then you should go make great money somewhere else, and within a company that offers a base salary, bonuses and expenses.

Cons

They will let anyone work for them, you don't even need a reasonable level of English and they'll stick you infront of someone's door to try and sell. They get you to spend days of your time (without pay, lunch, bus fare) for training, and then you can't justify squandering those day's, so you're committed to starting to make some money. You're 'self-employed' so that they don't have to take on any responsibility as an emplyer. They are selling to you (fake opportunity) as much as you are selling to the general public. I've worked for other direct marketing companies that will pay for your lunch when you're being trained, offer reasonable rates so that you can earn, and respect that you're a free-agent and won't pressure you when you don't want to work on a particular day. Take much of what you hear from their salespeople with a pinch of salt, many of them are professional spoofers.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 7 Reviews

Glassdoor has 8 Roar Promotions reviews submitted anonymously by Roar Promotions employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Roar Promotions is right for you.