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American Income Life

Part of Globe Life

Engaged Employer

American Income Life reviews

2.8

36% would recommend to a friend

(4,198 total reviews)
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Steven K. Greer

62% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

American Income Life has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 4,198 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The American Income Life employee rating is 23% below average for employers within the Insurance industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
1.0
Mar 19, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Like ANY MLM scam, if you can get enough people to fall for it, you can make a good bit of money... if you are willing to sell your soul or have no morals at all.

Cons

Calling all cattle. They accept anyone, and I mean anyone to work there. Just like all MLM's they need bodies, you are 1099 so it doesn't matter how many people they "hire" and they quit. Turnover is upwards of 80%, so don't worry if you don't like someone you work with wait a month they are more than likely to be gone. You BS the customers, you BS potential employees, and you BS yourself if you think you are doing anything helpful. You are actively told to make sure to use their moniker "the Taylor Group" to hide who you really work for; that alone should tell you enough about their business practices to not work here. Stay away.

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American Income Life Response
8y
Thank you for your review. We're sorry a career with American Income Life was not the best fit for you. American Income Life is a real company and in no way a MLM scam. We promote a culture of honesty and integrity but regret if that was not your experience. We wish success in your future endeavors.
3.0
Sep 20, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you work hard during the week and make 3-5 sales you will generally make $500-$1200 for that week. Management will motivate and train you as best they can because if you're successful then they are successful. Most of my co-workers are great and there is a bond between us. You get to work at your own pace after your manager is out of your car once you complete training.

Cons

Keep in mind I have been with the company for 6 months now. Misleading from day 1 in the "overview" or first interview. Pay structure is not what management said it is. You're not compensated for gas or travel expenses. Strictly commission based (yes I knew that going into it). There are no flexible hours like I was promised. My manager micro-manages, even the top producers in the office. Professionalism is decent at best. For example, manager smokes electronic cigarettes in the office while training, shares personal information way too openly, talks poorly about co-workers behind their backs, talks poorly about customers that would not purchase insurance, and is very hypocritical (do as I say, not as I do). Leads are not unlimited and a majority have been called or already seen by previous agents which is a failure on the internal structure and functionalism with the computer system and manager who has the ability to pick which leads to distribute to employees. For a fact, in my office I know management has given agents whom they do not want to stick around very long "bad lead packs." Leads consisting of people who have already declined an interest in having an agent go see them, essentially setting up the employee for failure. You are not upfront with customers to get in their homes. I do what I have to do to make money so I can survive but this is why I'm looking for a new job. You pull the "bait and switch" technique on customers in order to get a foot in their home. For example, "sir you are entitled to these benefits through your union and it's my job to come by and distribute them to you at no cost." Then you very very briefly mention that there are additional benefits they may qualify for, not telling them it's life insurance. Once in the home you quickly distribute their no cost benefits they already have regardless if we come out to see them or not, and then explain how they are going to die and that you need to protect your family so they don't have to pay for your funeral. Even if they already have life insurance you have been trained to tell and sell upon the "fact" that your product will actually pay out among a few other reasons why AIL is the best company. Let me emphasize these points: - AIL is very misleading - My managers specifically are hypocritical and borderline unethical. - You will have no work/life balance - Always hiring new agents because management needs to "code" a few agents in about a month and a half to keep their leadership bonuses. If you don't fit in the company they WILL hire you and fire you. They won't fire you immediately they will set you up for failure and make you quit or fire you after not hitting your quota for a few weeks. - Many leads are not new and have been recycled, even after the customer declined interest. - Management will over-promise and try to sell you on how much money you will make and tell you how much money they make and yet (specifically speaking about my managers) do not live lavishly to say the least. - If you don't make a sale or get an many appointments set it is always your fault and furthermore that means you didn't make a paycheck either.

1.0
Dec 30, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great job for people with no education who don't want to be a ditch digger or waiter. You make about the same amount of money. Great training for bait and switch sales. Also they'll hire ANYONE willing to work for them as anyone who recruits someone below them gets part of their commission. There is the possibility of making around 1000 a week after your month long training with no pay.

Cons

Cleverly disguised pyramid. It's so easy to get a job there because anyone who hires you gets part of your commissions. Long late hours (getting home around 11-12). You get your foot into people's houses saying your giving them a free child safety kit and then put them in a high pressure sales position trying to sell them life insurance. Most clients don't have a job and will be paying for their life insurance with government welfare checks. You'll train hard for a month with no pay, the whole time the managers are using tactics to make you feel like you're too committed to back out. (they want you to make them some money after all) They'll leave you to sit alone for hours between training sessions. You've invested this much time already so they know they've got you. The life insurance isn't even "Union discounted" as you're instructed to tell people. The Whole life policies are priced normally and the term life policies "are a scam" (direct quote from a manager). You have to pay about 300$ to start the job getting your life insurance license. My advice, don't waste your time, money, and gas. Hold out for a real job that doesn't take advantage of people!!

Viewing 16 - 18 of 4,198 Reviews

Glassdoor has 5,229 American Income Life reviews submitted anonymously by American Income Life employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if American Income Life is right for you.