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DriveTime Automotive Group

Engaged Employer

DriveTime Automotive Group reviews

3.4

54% would recommend to a friend

(1,391 total reviews)
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Mary Leigh Phillips

62% approve of CEO

47% positive business outlook

DriveTime Automotive Group has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 1,391 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The DriveTime Automotive Group employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
3.0
Jul 2, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great Mesa building, chairs,dual- monitors and quad, vertical desks if needed. Break rooms, filtered water. 1 hour lunch. All new computers. Good internal tech support and equipment and operating systems. Great bonuses on the 'Finance' side.....but the 'Lease' side, is the red-headed step-child and laughing stock of finance employees.

Cons

Slow vacation accrual-expensive benefits if you don't jump through hoops on their 'wellness' site. Not enough bathrooms for females Costco-sized building/very small parking lot- you will be walking to work from (ironically), the Costco down the street if you are not on an opening shift. This is annoying in the Arizona 115 degree summer sun, adhering to the pointless dress code. Outbound dialer has bad algorithms and ends up calling customers who don’t need to be called. The root of lease’s problems, is the product itself, and its targeted consumer base. Lease buys crappy 2007 Dodge Calibers with 120k miles for $3500, does a worthless ‘Rigorous inspection’ and leases vehicles to people with 380 FICO scores whose proof of income is ‘child support’, so the dealership gets the new boyfriend to be a co-buyer, because his job at McDonalds, will push the application into acceptance. Many of the accounts that came across my reps screens actually show the ‘job’ for the customer as ‘Unemployed’ or ‘SSI’. These cars are then leased with dry-rotted tires with just barely enough tread, that don’t match. All needing brakes and rotors. Missing spares. Clothes and personal items from the last poor sap who just got repo’d 3 days ago are often overlooked by the dealership AND customer, once it’s put back out for lease. Check engine lights are reset with diagnostic readers and always come back on within 24-48 hours of the new lease victim’s purchase. You will receive many calls from people whose check engine light comes on that first weekend they get the car. Bad batteries, low oil, right out of the gate, all for a pricey 460$ a month, to somebody who can’t even afford to keep their cell-phone paid for. These people literally, do not have $4 for to add a quart of oil to save their engine in-between their ‘free’ oil change at Sears every 4000 miles. THIS, is who you will talk to everyday. Customers whom the free-market dictates have no business ‘owning’ a car, Drivetime lease, fills this natural vacuum with the lowest of the lowest ilk. There is no intention of the customer actually completing the 2.5 year lease for $15,000. The only quest is to churn the account and collect ‘almost enough’ of a payment every 14 days. They are all on check systems and can’t have bank accounts and are always ‘in the hospital’, which is why they are late in paying you. The save rate (getting customers current) got so bad (around 51%), that bonuses for actually being good at collecting, stopped, and switched entirely to being based on your quality assurance scores. Meanwhile ‘Finance’ reps, sitting 40 feet away from you, doing the same thing, can easily get monthly bonuses easily of $1000-$3000. The career path to management is filled with empty promises and no pay increase and a dangling carrot of hope, only to be smashed by a phrase from leadership of ,” we need to put you back on the phones due to call volume for a few weeks”. So I left, only to find out from a friend who still works there, that the position was recreated and filled by another carrot seeker, from another department. Horrible flip-flopping schedules during the week, and no 'swapping of shifts' just for a day to accommodate family needs etc...use your PTO, or take an occurrence whereas my new job, actually has an employee portal, for swapping shifts with no management needed....brilliant! Hire on into Finance side, and you’ll be ok. Stay away from lease.

3.0
Apr 30, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great culture, benefits, and work/life balance. Nice atmosphere and good co-workers

Cons

Pay is a bit low, bonuses are created to save money not create more earning potential, promotions aren't based on merit, if you like to schmooze for promotions you'll be okay.

2.0
Apr 19, 2016

Highschool or Career? Hard to tell

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

AMAZING new office compared to the Phoenix one we were in, really is very beautiful. Cafeteria with snacks that are inexpensive and worth it when hungry. Young environment. Laid back dress code. Employees for the most part seem to really love it. Great amount of starting vacation days. Happy Hours. It is made to seem like a very exciting place to work at first....

Cons

Working at DriveTime feels no different than attending high school all over again. EXTREMELY clicky and catty. People are talking about each other behind each others backs constantly, on my first day I noticed some of my co-workers complaining about others as soon as they walked away... does not leave a nice impression. What were they saying behind my back once I walked away? No training, not even to understand the basics needed to succeed in your role/department. Management for the most part, in my experience, is rude and it is their way or the highway. If you do not feel comfortable to suck up to managers and make it seem like you are busy even when you are not - you are outta there. They will try move you into other departments and expect you to take very dramatic pay cuts as if it is nothing and money grows on trees once you get home.

Viewing 58 - 60 of 1,391 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,441 DriveTime Automotive Group reviews submitted anonymously by DriveTime Automotive Group employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if DriveTime Automotive Group is right for you.