Applied Systems reviews

3.4

56% would recommend to a friend

(746 total reviews)
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Taylor Rhodes

71% approve of CEO

57% positive business outlook

Applied Systems has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 746 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Applied Systems employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

746 reviews
2.0
Mar 7, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You start off with sick days, vacation days, and a personal day Supervisors typically understand life outside work comes first Coworkers can be very enjoyable Free bagels on Tuesday One extra vacation day for your birthday

Cons

This all pertains primarily to the entry-level support jobs: You are treated like a child, and paid like a burger flipper Extremely poor communication from management down Stressful work environment. High call volume and hold times combine with a shortage of qualified workers to make every day feel insurmountable. Plus, even with call monitoring software on every workstation, in a year and a half I have received over 1700 emails pertaining to the number of calls currently on hold. If employees don't respond to the call volume quickly enough, supervisors will start going cubicle to cubicle to check on technicians and tell them to take a call, even when they have the ability to see who is and isn't on the phone from their desk. We are given 6 hour shifts of taking incoming calls. The other 2 hours per day are meant to callback customers we needed further investigation on. Many of these calls can take up to a half hour or longer, and many techs can end up with 6-10 calls in their personal queue to follow up on. Besides this, we also have to monitor and accept incoming chat support during this time, as well as randomly get assigned priority calls from the group queue. And, if the incoming call volume and/or hold time get too high, we are then told to take more incoming calls, even during these small callback windows we are given. This often leads to a week or longer to resolve an issue that may take a couple of hours total, if we were given the time for it. With a college degree and 6 years of IT experience, I am paid less than someone with a high school diploma and zero experience, working in my same department, who started after I did. I am currently training a new employee who also gets paid more than me. Ask for way more than you think you're worth, and make them talk you down from there. Otherwise, you will get the base salary, regardless of qualification or experience. And your annual raise will barely meet cost of living increases, if that. After requesting a change in my insurance status from HR, it took 4 weeks to get any word back, and I was charged retroactively for all the coverage I didn't capitalize on during that time. When I inquired about not receiving my health insurance card, the head of benefits gave me the 800 number for the insurance company and told me to call them and ask. There is zero incentive to be good at your job. Reviews and raises are practically nonexistent. Whether you constantly exceed the company goals, or you skate by doing the bare minimum, you will likely get similar results at your annual review. When the CEO comes to the office to do "company-wide meetings", the Support department is required to stay in their cubicles and continue to work. We are told to watch the video of the address after the fact, but are never given time off the phones to do so. Initial training for new techs is overwhelming, and unhelpful. They go 10 miles wide and a half an inch deep, so when you hit the floor, you are usually completely lost. The company constantly pats itself on the back for record profits, business acquisitions, and surpassing Sales and Retention goals, yet none of this trickles down to the employees. Development, Sales, HR, etc all get hour lunches, while Support gets a half an hour. When I inquired management about this they said "Well, you could always stay an extra half hour and take an hour lunch." 1. No, I am not allowed to do this because of the micro-management of scheduling. 2. I carpool with a Development employee who works the same hours I do, and he gets an hour lunch. Signs all around the building claim that "Support leads the way" and that we are "The industry's best Support." Yet we are the lowest paid, highest stress position in the company (outside of perhaps upper management). When I inquired about performance and experience compensation raises, I was told "Why don't you go to such and such other department? They make more." I have zero training in that department. I constantly exceed the company goals for support quality, I am knowledgable about what I currently do, and the only way to get a decent raise is to go to a department that doesn't necessarily match my skill set or expertise? Even management who have been with the company for 20+ years are typically making the same a decent employee would after 3-5 years in most tech companies. The software itself... It is horrifically outdated and broken. We actively support all 15 versions of our primary software, not including maintenance updates and patches. Plenty of customers are running software 4 or 5 versions old. And only on the most recent version do we even begin to support Windows 8, Office 2013, etc. System-breaking errors can occur from misplaced characters in databases. Common workflow errors will be written-off as version specific, and when the customer updates, the error still occurs.

2.0
Feb 28, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

People I work with are pretty cool.

Cons

Crappy training and an extreme lack of communication within and between different departments. Nobody knows what the heck is going on. Communication to customers on inconsistent issues with product implementation is difficult because why it's not working is not understood. Sales also doesn't know what the products do some of the time and make implementation look like idiots when the client says "what do you mean it doesn't do that?" Or "I didn't know I needed that". Then there is a delay and you get in trouble with management, because the reports are off and they want to know why it's not completed. Well sorry the customer drives the speed of the implementation, whether management wants to admit it or not. We cannot force clients to answer right away. If they are busy, they are busy. Hello???? The entire economy is overworked, and those that have jobs are very busy and struggle to complete items that are not their #1 priority. If they are paying for the product and not answering the phone, oh well. 40 hour work week is not enough time to get work done, and extra time needs to be put in to complete work.

3.0
Feb 28, 2015

Good

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

the people are great, local to home, the work until lately was good.

Cons

management, compensation, career paths don't exist

Viewing 658 - 660 of 746 Reviews

Glassdoor has 774 Applied Systems reviews submitted anonymously by Applied Systems employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Applied Systems is right for you.