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Native Pest Management

Engaged employer

Good Benefits, Bad Ownership - Pest Control Technician Native Pest Management Employee Review

3.0
26 Jan 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great benefits, lots of hours available, easy jobs, pay is above average, much easier than working at somewhere like Hulett or Terminix

Cons

Nowhere near the kind of resources that larger companies like Terminix has, constant and I mean CONSTANT turnover between managers and employees. Owner has changed business models just about every year in existence. No consistency. Training is all over the place. Literally anyone could work here too. If you have a clean driving record and a brain you can work hereZ

Explore other reviews about Native Pest Management

5.0
9 Aug 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Commission, people, and work events

Cons

A 5 word minimum response

1
1.0
5 Aug 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The paycheck is decent if you're just trying to fund your job search. A few coworkers are decent people stuck in the same system.

Cons

The culture here is driven almost entirely by nepotism and favoritism. If you have a connection to someone in leadership, you’re insulated from consequences. Performance and behavior don’t seem to matter. Promotions are often handed out based on relationships, not merit, and that creates a deeply demoralizing environment for anyone who actually tries to do the job well. Discrimination is a real concern. Many employees from minority backgrounds are pushed into lower-level roles and held to unfair standards. However, one particularly disturbing example involved a white employee being demoted after using her maternity leave, which clearly signaled that no one is safe from retaliation when they become "inconvenient" to leadership. That incident was not isolated; this company finds ways to push out or sideline employees it no longer sees as useful. Leadership lacks professionalism and seems more interested in maintaining their status than actually improving the company. Managers frequently interfere in departments they don't oversee, leading to confusion, power struggles, and a complete lack of accountability. Raising concerns or calling out issues is a fast track to being pushed out. The longer you stay, the more dysfunction becomes apparent. New problems surface constantly, often in ways that leave you wondering how much lower the bar can go.

4
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