Pros
Will hire you if you can walk, talk, and chew gum.
Cons
Let's be clear. I never actually started work with them; backed out shortly after initial offer of employment. Therefore, I'm limited to how much I can actually say, but I will anyway. Simply put, they make awful lofty promises of incredible salary and promotion potential in a short period of time...there's the first red flag, if something seems to too good to be true, it probably is. Second red flag, they interview people on a constant and regular basis, and seem to hire almost all of them. Now let's be realistic, if the ridiculously fast promotion time tables were on the level, that means that everybody would be a manager...bull. This is not possible. That therefore means that there is an extreme turnover rate. I asked one of the managers in the initial interview (before I realized all this) how the retention rate was, and he said it was excellent in a very fast paced tone which was laced with numerical gobldegook and percentage data...a standard tactic of deception in any kind of dishonest sales. This is the third red flag...misrepresentation of the truth to potential employees. Also, I initially heard of this job by a third party career agent who found my resume on Monster. I was initially told that the position was for a company called Correa and Associates...no mention whatsoever was made of American Income Life. Further, I was told the position was about explaining benefits to labor unions...no mention of insurance or sales was made whatsoever. In addition to this, they tell you you'll be making 50k plus starting. At no point will they ever volunteer to you that your pay is 100% commission based...you have to ask. And if you do ask, they tap dance around it like a f'ng ballerina. Fourth red flag, they claim to be accredited by the better business bureau, but in fact are not (I checked). Bottom line...a job that has a lot of people constantly getting interviewed and hired on almost a daily basis + talk of wildly out if this world salaries and promotion in lightning speed + deliberate omission of key points in the initial hiring process = pyramid scheme. I'll admit, I was initially luered to this because of the smooth sales tactics of people promising huge incomes, but then common sense prevailed and I decided to trust my gut...thank God I did.