Large Company Struggles Small Business Attitude - Project Manager Onterris Employee Review

2.0
Feb 16, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible schedule, decent benefits/vacation policy, wide diversity of people and experiences.

Cons

Corporate is very money driven to the point it hampers daily activities. They expect people to make more and more for the company while giving very little back. The corporate team in general is clueless on what environmental services actually is since none of them have an environmental background. They don't listen to the struggles of the employees, force us to use awful software for project management, and hardly acknowledge the people behind the company. For a large company, each office operates fairly independently so nothing is streamlined and each office is only concerned about their own finances and looking good for corporate.

avatar
Onterris Response
6y
We hear your comment about project management software and have embarked on the implementation of a new global and standardized system. We agree that our people are great and will continue to offer competitive pay and benefits. Kevin-SVP Human Resources.

Explore other reviews about Onterris

5.0
Jun 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Company is highly adaptable. Maintains agility even though the company large. Upper management supports and encourages employee involvement.

Cons

Being a publicly traded company hinders some type of growth due to burdensome overhead.

avatar
Onterris Response
5d
Thank you for the feedback and market advice. Kevin SVP Human Resources
1.0
Jun 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Prior to our company's acquisition with MEG/Onterris, the company had a strong culture, supportive leadership, and employees who genuinely cared about one another and the success of the business.

Cons

If your company has been acquired, pay close attention to employee reviews and take them seriously. I did, and many of the concerns raised turned out to be accurate. Employees were repeatedly assured that the acquisition would create new opportunities and that jobs were secure. In my experience, that was not the reality. Long-tenured employees were gradually pushed out while similar positions were later reposted with modified titles or responsibilities. The former ownership ultimately lost control of decisions despite assurances that little would change. Employees with years of institutional knowledge spent years implementing new procedures, documenting procedures, learning the new system, and navigating disorganized Workday implementations with minimal support. Much of the guidance consisted of being directed to read instructions on the intranet. If you are in a finance position they will let you go! They will tell you they want it all centralized in Arkansas but that's not true, there are plenty of people working remote but you will be pushed out no matter how long you've been with your company. This not only affected me but our entire team was wiped out. They didn't give us a heads up in advance to look for anything for 2 years we were told everyone was safe and I believed them. Keep an eye out for the constant restructuring of upper management as well.

avatar
Onterris Response
5d
Thank you for a decade of contribution, and for sharing this so candidly. Change of this scale asks a lot of trust from employees, and we recognize that. We take feedback like yours seriously as we work to communicate more clearly through transitions and support the people navigating them. We'd genuinely value hearing more directly please contact our HR team at HRCorp@onterris.com so we can listen fully. Kevin Gill, SVP, HR
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All