no leadership. short/long contracts - Apprentice Software Tester PLATO Employee Review

2.0
May 8, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Office culture is OK. They try to have events and everyone is fairly friendly and approachable when you need help A stepping stone into tech where you can learn a lot Good contracts, sometimes short-term but can lead to long-term employment and possibly being hired out to the place you work at Pay is OK. From what i understand PLATO individuals are sort of separate from PQA before the merge but those of us in the apprenticeship program have not received even 75% of the promised salary yet and even this is below the industry standard and even a living wage

Cons

I have had manager changes due to restructuring and did not receive much communication or help at the minimum Communication is always a miss when trying to figure out access, time logging or who to talk to when it comes to managers at PLATO or contracts One leader in particular treated one of my indigenous colleagues like he was a criminal in the office and made him uncomfortable when he was nowhere near his belongings but would mention he was afraid of missing something because of this individual This same leader for some reason has a certain ring tone on his phone that he would let play especially when my indigenous coworkers around before

Explore other reviews about PLATO

1.0
Apr 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You can make RARE good connections among the knowledgeable work force.

Cons

This company operates like a recycling plant—except the material being recycled is its employees. They consistently pay below market rates and lay people off whenever there are no active projects (“on the bench”). Employees are pushed to their limits, their skills and time squeezed for maximum output, only to be let go once they’re no longer immediately needed. At the same time, new hires—often those desperate for work—are brought in, and the cycle repeats. You’re treated like a disposable product: a shiny fruit juice bottle that looks valuable at first, but is quickly discarded once used. The environment is heavily micromanaged, with unnecessary in-office mandates that don’t seem to add real value. Favoritism is common, and leadership—particularly in delivery regions—often appears underqualified. Meanwhile, higher-ups seem to benefit financially, while the people doing the actual work are left with very little. Despite being the ones generating revenue, employees are told there’s “no budget” when they ask for raises. The message is clear: you are replaceable. Knowledge-sharing initiatives like COEs (Centers of Excellence) feel less like growth opportunities and more like a way to extract your expertise for FREE before moving on to the next person. PS - Your career growth depends on how much LinkedIn posts you have liked or re-shared lol

2
4.0
Jun 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Positive Leadership Learning Opportunties Nationwide

Cons

Work is slow at times

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All