It sounds great, until you actually get your foot in the door. - Teller IBC Bank Employee Review

1.0
Oct 10, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They allow opportunities for volunteer work and have quarterly parties to celebrate the people with the most account sales. They also have an extensive, month long training program before you go to your branch.

Cons

Constantly understaffed so employees have to travel all over the area. Employees are forced to get a certain number of new accounts per month or risk disipline and for lack of performance. After a couple of months of non-performance, they will terminate you. You will seldom see anyone that has been there for a year for this reason. They have an extremely high turn over rate. It is incredibly difficult to stay there to recieve any of the long term benefits they make sound so appealing.

Explore other reviews about IBC Bank

5.0
Mar 20, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

IBC offers a fun, low stress environment. Management gets along well with frontline employees and always has celebrations for employees.

Cons

Could be low pay but it’s an entry level job and gives you the opportunity to move up.

1.0
Apr 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You could make really good friends....

Cons

GARBAGE pay for such a high-responsibility position. You’re doing way more than a regular teller, but the compensation does not reflect the workload at all. They advertise “competitive pay,” but every other bank in my area starts on average $4–$5 higher. The only “extra” compensation is micro bonuses for CC referrals, account openings (SALES ONLY — $7 per MAX POINT account), and JDP surveys, ranging from $25–$35 per successful one—good luck consistently hitting those. Be ready for long lines, nonstop pressure, and constant feedback about metrics and performance. It’s a high-stress environment that does not match the pay level. Once you’re cross-trained, expect to be doing the work of both a teller and a sales role while receiving none of the benefits of the sales point system that is supposedly used to justify the structure. Use this job as a stepping stone into banking, but don’t treat it as a long-term option—it’s not worth the stress. Across the industry and even locally, compensation is noticeably higher for similar or even less demanding roles. There’s no real rush or clear structure for advancement, but at least with the periodic mass layoffs used to cut costs and reset staffing back to lower pay levels, there’s technically opportunity to move up during turnover… (you still might be the one getting let go anyway).

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