H&R Block reviews about "schedule"

60% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

669 reviews
4.0
Mar 25, 2022

Seasonal position

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good work environment, Flexible schedule, Fills a Gap in your resume

Cons

It's seasonal, it may not work for every job seeker

5.0
Mar 10, 2022

Great part-time

Recommend
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Pros

They are super flexible when it comes to scheduling.

Cons

Low pay, but fair enough for a part-time student.

5.0
Mar 29, 2022

Great work environment

Recommend
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Pros

Supervisor was amazing. Very understanding and real. Very flexible schedules.

Cons

Sometimes clients can be not so nice. Upper management can be difficult.

3.0
Mar 21, 2022
Recommend
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Pros

Learning - for $35/ year you can earn CE towards preparing taxes for the next tax season. If you love to learn, this is great Community - being able to not only assist in tax preparation, but block will help you with local non-profits You can *mostly* set your work schedule - I am in a very small office in a small town. I would not say we are understaffed so much as no one wants to close (we close anywhere between 5 pm and 8 pm on weekdays, 5 on saturday, 4 on sunday) or work weekends (to be fair, we aren't super busy during the weekends) - if you have a full time job (non-seasonal) you actually can set your schedule around the other job. Opportunities for growth - depending on your goals, there is ample opportunity, not necessarily for management, but for level of returns you prepare as well as programs to assist you to become an enrolled agent or an instructor. Overtime - depending on your position and office, there is potential for nearly every week getting overtime beginning the last week of January/first week of February though the month of February and then again mid-March through tax day. Again, depends on your office location and office

Cons

Seasonal - Tax season is January 4th - April 15th (except when it lands on a weekend or holiday, or has been extended by the IRS) Office leaders not allowed overtime - that's right. Receptionists are allowed up to 10 hours of overtime per week, tax pros unlimited (during the above mentioned dates) Multi-unit leaders are salary (the ones I've spoken to have actually earned less in this position than the office leaders (ATL) that they manage) Associate Team Leaders (ATL) are glorified receptionists that get the added duty of doing daily huddles, coaching in the moment, being the liaison between tax pros and DGM's & MTL's, ordering office supplies, fielding bad client reviews ensuring that the office stays clean and aren't allowed to work more than 40 hours per week (this includes offices that don't have additional receptionists, not even they are allowed overtime) Commissions/Bonus are non-existent for most tax pros/ATLs - Must always have a free tax pro for walk-ins and commissions are earned by having a higher production value. If someone is needed nearly every day for this purpose only, they are not being productive according to the company, usually first year tax pros are used for this purpose, but (we were told anyways) this past year Texas was unable to offer the income tax course virtually or in person, so we have no first years to fill the dead space needed or to help with the front desk (first years can clock in under tax pro or receptionist, with receptionist hours not counting against their productive hours, which they aren't allowed to earn commissions so why does it matter what they are clocked under?) And say you have a tax pro who refuses to work without a receptionist and this tax pro does as many returns as the others in the office combined (or more, is often the case), well your ATL gets stuck working that person's schedule and if your office isn't allowed a receptionist? Well too bad, even on days/(mostly)evenings the office has near constant phone callers asking questions the receptionist can answer, we have to studiously ignore the constant ringing phone when a client is in front of us, make people who come in during these appointments wait to be greeted and checked in and then get in trouble when clients complain about lack of phone answering or someone behind the front desk. Out-side leadership hires have zero hands on training - if they've never worked in a tax office before, they don't know how to do their job. I don't care if you were the DGM of ACE Hardware or some sporting goods store you do not have the full training required for your position and your tax pros are going to resent that fact, even if they adore you otherwise. (I have worked as a tax pro and an ATL and I can tell you from personal experience, I was not trained properly for that role, and if I wasn't the type of person I am, my office would not have been open the entire season because of it) Being asked the same 2 questions by every. single. caller and walkin. to add on to this, the client that calls every single day AND comes in every single day to ask why "WE" haven't issued their refund yet - they make fake appointments with fake names to waste your time (and lose clients i might add) because they have zero comprehension skills or probably shouldn't be handling things like tax returns or refunds. - and unless they are being threatening or s******* harassing you, there isn't really much you can do. Inconsistency with policy being followed district by district/region/corporate - training has some girl with bright purple hair as an employee, but we aren't allowed to have unnaturally colored hair according to our DGM, also, small nose piercings are fine, but not small labrets (can't even wear a retainer), dress code is the biggest with inconsistency (we can't wear capris or sandals, corporate gets to wear T-Shirts, Jeans and Gym shoes on fridays/other special days, no one else gets to apparently, etc) not being allowed to use tools that others in the district with same qualifications are allowed to (WFA) - there is no easy way to report this happening and if you ask HR what the policy is they give you the policy word for word then say "but your DGM can say differently" .....then WHY is it policy? The clocking system is the wort system I have ever had to use. It takes 5 minutes to wait for windows to load, update, open the web page before you have to type 3 different things in to clock in - and then I can lose my job if I forget to approve my time card every other week. How slow the network is and how many times I have to log in to every single program I open and how I'm not supposed to apologize for the program messing up even when it messes up, supposed to act like I don't know what I'm doing I guess.

2.0
Mar 6, 2022

Not Great

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay is fair and if you want more hours, the managers are usually more than happy to put you on the schedule.

Cons

What they don't tell you in the job description, or even during training, is that they rely heavily on telemarketing so pull people in. Every day you'll be given a list of phone numbers to call, and you need to get through them all, and once you get through them all, you get to do more. It gets really crowded sometimes (toward the end of tax season), and the people in the office become uncontrollable at that point. I was chastised for allowing too many people in, but at the same time, corporate doesn't want us to turn people away. I was also told off for "not smiling enough"...I was wearing a MASK. I wore a mask every day, yet somehow I wasn't smiling enough. How can anyone even tell? There was just an overall sense of absolute misery coming from every Tax Pro, and even the Manager. Everyone hated being there, and eventually that feeling rubbed off on me too.

1.0
Mar 3, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I suppose I have heard from people in other states that they have had a good experience, but I have not personally encountered any good reason to work at H&R Block. They will spin you tales of employee appreciation and great benefits, but they cannot be relied upon to follow through.

Cons

Where do I begin? I worked really hard to pass the California tax course and earn a position for tax season. Unfortunately, HRB treats its seasonal employees like absolute garbage. I was promised a mentor, in addition to continuing support and education throughout the season; none of which was actually provided. My manager was a bully, who would schedule people last minute without informing them, and frequently put me on back-to-back 12-hour shifts, 7 days a week, whether I agreed to it or not, because he couldn’t get anyone else to come in. His superior was completely aware of his inappropriate behavior, and did nothing. Meanwhile, there was absolutely no way of submitting a HR complaint. COVID protocols were completely ignored, and I was frequently verbally abused and threatened by customers. This is partially because, although HRB claims to value transparency in its pricing, accurate and up-to-date price sheets were usually unavailable, and most customers didn’t understand how to read them and assumed they were paying a flat rate. I was also encouraged to complete additional testing to level up so that I would be able to do more complex returns and earn more than minimum wage. I was frequently given returns that were far too complex for me to handle, simply because more experienced tax preparers didn’t want to do them. I was promised multiple bonuses, none of which I received. H&R Block cheated me and their customers out of thousands of dollars, with absolutely no recourse available to me. I tell everyone I know to avoid HRB at all costs, whether they’re thinking of having their taxes done there or working there.

5.0
Mar 9, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

*flexible schedule *inclusive & independent work style *Straight forward training *Kind managers

Cons

*not year round *prone to drama among tax professionals if clientele is not evenly distributed.

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