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Tasca Automotive Group

Is this your company?

might as well be a slave the pay and treatment would be better - Sales Consultant Tasca Automotive Group Employee Review

1.0
Feb 6, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

none this place is a sweat shop

Cons

oh where do i start the managers and employees have the intelligence level of the frat house in animal house and the head hancho there is jim belushi himself also to make it worse they use favoritism and bullying to scare you into thinking you cant work elsewhere or are useless and those feelings are reassured by constant slures insults not to mention on top of it they make you work in hazardous conditions and they never let you follow your schedule its frowned upon to take your day off. The managers drink on the job and smash trucks together when plowing and drunk their is more sexual harassment and workplace sexual encounters than a home in the hills of west Virginia. My advice fire all the management board the place up then level it and turn it in something that involves religon to redeem this hell on earth. and i gave one star because their wasnt 0 as a option also they withhold your pay pay other people they like better for your deals and underpay you i barely made minimum wage for selling three cars in a week how disgusting

Explore other reviews about Tasca Automotive Group

5.0
Jun 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Motivated, hard working staff grate

Cons

Nothing negative to say all positive

1.0
Apr 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A lot of false promises

Cons

I received and accepted a written offer for a Used Car Manager position and made career decisions based on that commitment. Throughout the process, I interviewed with multiple GMs (within a two week span) and had direct conversations with ownership where expectations were clearly established. One day before my anticipated start date, I was informed that the role was no longer available and that I would instead be placed into a Finance Manager position—despite having explicitly stated I was not interested in finance. When I followed up with HR, I was told I was still being hired for the original role, highlighting a significant breakdown in communication across leadership. This was not a minor misunderstanding—it reflected a lack of coordination and accountability at a critical stage of the hiring process. Extending a written offer and then introducing conflicting information at the last minute puts candidates in a difficult and potentially damaging professional position. Candidates should be aware that alignment between leadership, management, and HR appears inconsistent, and to proceed with caution when making decisions based on verbal or written commitments.

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