The Truth Behind the Positive Reviews - Anonymous employee Alert 360 Employee Review

1.0
19 Apr 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I have never before been compelled to write a glass door review, but after reading this, you’ll understand why I am now. I joined the company nearly a year ago, having been persuaded to make a job change by a pitch that included a potentially lucrative bonus structure and joining a growing company on the cutting edge of technology. They showed me the banner they had earned for being one of “Oklahoma’s Best Places to Work” for two years running, and handed me a magazine from the organization that awarded them this distinction that had many pictures of happy employees and a write-up of all the great perks at CSG. They also pointed me to many positive Glass Door reviews. I was all-in.

Cons

While it’s true that the company is growing and, in terms of technology, they are on the cutting edge of the industry, the rest of the pitch proved to be a mirage. While the CEO’s vision is sound, the detriment to the company’s progression is the surrounding leadership. I anticipated that a growing company sought candidates that they saw as potentially growing with the company. Leaders molding others to join their ranks as the company expands. I had one week of training, which consisted of a basic rundown of the equipment and how the systems worked, beyond that, the training was minimal. The feedback I did receive came from peers. Less of a “lending a helping hand” sort of way and more of a self-serving way. Leadership actually has agents seeking mistakes made by other agents and sending an email to that agent’s supervisor AND manager. Once a month you are presented with printed screenshots of your mistakes and asked to sign-off on them. This goes in your file. Once, a peer found a mistake I had made months earlier that I was confronted by management about. I explained I had only been on the job for 3 days when the mistake happened. I was still asked to sign it and it went in my file. Rather than cultivate an environment for people to grow and creating a team atmosphere, this turns everyone against each other. Agents are encouraged to undermine other agents. I have worked other call centers. None have been anywhere close to as busy as this one. You will spend 100% of your day talking to customers and then get questioned by management as to why other tasks were neglected, like responding to customer emails or listening to your quality assurance recordings. If you so much as log out of the queue for 30 seconds to tend to one of these tasks you get a phone call from management questioning what you’re doing. If you say you were pulling a customer email to respond to, you are told there are customers waiting in the phone queue and forced to log in. When they confront you about emails not being done, responding with “I was on the phone” will label you incapable and an excuse-maker. Why would management put precedence on the inbound calls? It’s the only stat they have to answer to. Anything else doesn’t get done and they blame you. Micromanagement at its finest, with a sole purpose of covering their own tails. The busy atmosphere is incredibly stressful. This runs through all of the agents and up through management. Rather than bring in adequate help, they are convinced the problem is merely the employees not following procedures or working fast enough. At no point will you ever be “caught up” in this job, and no matter how hard you try, management will find something you missed. You can’t go 100mph and expect perfection. And at CSG, there’s no tolerance for being human. Rather than increase staffing, the company’s answer is mandatory overtime. I had permanent mandatory OT the entire time I was there. Then, they send out a survey asking how happy you are with things like work/life balance. Think you have a better way of doing things? A way to enhance customer service or streamline a process? You better keep that to yourself, too. Any attempt at this is viewed as challenging management’s authority. And those positive Glass Door reviews? Many are coming from current employees, encouraged by management to write them from their desk at work. I was pressured repeatedly to do so. How truthful a review do you think that will get you? As for the Best Places to Work in Oklahoma award? You guessed it, employees are heavily pressured as well. Many fear for their jobs. There is another review on here where the reviewer mentions the CEO saying in a town hall that if you weren’t one of the ones that voted for the company, you could get out. I was there for this, and found it as unprofessional and manipulative as the original reviewer.

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Alert 360 Response
8y
I’m sorry your employment with us didn’t work out. I appreciate you taking the time to note your feedback. We try to learn from all feedback. Good, bad and the ugly. To note a few of your points; First and foremost, yes we do strive for perfection on every customer interaction we have. I’m sorry if that seems harsh, but we are not a call center selling vacation rentals or repairing appliances, we protect lives and property every minute of the day, thus perfection is critical. On call volume, yes we are busy and a very active center. Well managed and growing call centers should get, well.......lots of calls. On reviews and voting. Nothing can be further from the truth. If employees don’t want to vote for us as a best place to work, that’s absolutely within their right and fine with me. What I’ve said in town halls and will continue to say is that if any of our employees are not proud to work at our company and they don’t like what they do, they absolutely should find something else to do, which is what you clearly did and again, perfectly fine. I do want you to find a career and a company that you love and I’m truly sorry that was not with us. Regards, Richard Ginsburg CEO

Explore other reviews about Alert 360

5.0
5 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Mix of installations, inspections, and repair calls. Nice that technicians are trusted to handle their responsibilities without being supervised all the time. Improving both my technical and communication skills (customers expect clear explanations during service visits). Busy most days, but shifts fly by.

Cons

Occasional disruptions to the schedule when installations take longer than expected

2.0
7 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I really thought working here would be a good fit for me and my career goals, but my experience here has proven that isn’t the case. If you’re considering applying for a position here, I recommend looking for other companies to work for instead.

Cons

My experience with Alert 360 hasn’t been a pleasant one, so far. Most of the managers here are hostile and treat employees with disrespect. They harass and bully employees into meeting unreasonable demands, answer any questions they receive with sarcasm, and publicly humiliate anyone who makes mistakes. The leadership isn’t any better; they are greedy, insensitive, and couldn’t care less about employees’ well-being. Every decision they make is rooted in greed and often comes at your expense.

1
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Alert 360 Response
2w
Thank you for the feedback. Clearly your experience at Alert 360 was not a positive one, and I respect your right to share your opinion. That said, I do not believe this review reflects the experience of the vast majority of our employees across the country. We have many team members who have been with us for years — and in some cases decades — because they have found opportunities for growth, advancement, and long-term careers here. We absolutely have high expectations and operate in a fast-paced, performance-driven business. Protecting hundreds of thousands of customers and supporting a nationwide operation requires accountability and urgency. But there is a difference between holding people accountable and treating people disrespectfully, and I do not support or tolerate harassment, bullying, or humiliation by management. I genuinely wish you the best moving forward. Regards, Richard Ginsburg CEO Alert 360
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