Huitt-Zollars reviews

3.4

51% would recommend to a friend

(118 total reviews)

Robert J. McDermott

56% approve of CEO

37% positive business outlook

Huitt-Zollars has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 118 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Huitt-Zollars employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Construction, Repair & Maintenance Services industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

118 reviews
1.0
Nov 19, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The health benefits are decent. The young staff, those below 40, make the environment fun.

Cons

Over six years, an employee contributed to multiple teams and built strong peer relationships. Most of the experience was positive. The resignation process, however, was hostile and unprofessional. After submitting a resignation already discussed with their supervisor, the employee was pulled into a meeting by someone outside their reporting line. The person criticized the notice period, speculated about future employment, and ignored boundaries. They referenced alleged negative feedback from a former supervisor and applied pressure to reconsider the resignation. The next day, a second meeting was held without HR, the supervisor, or practice leadership. The same individual continued pressing about the departure, made sarcastic remarks about PTO, and claimed the employee held “company secrets.” The employee’s final day was made immediate. Personal items were packed without consent, and the employee was followed to the lobby despite requests for space. The offboarding was coercive. No apology was offered. No opportunity to transition work or say goodbye. No information was provided about benefits or final pay. The employee was locked out of their computer before departure. The exit process revealed a toxic culture. Boundaries were ignored, gossip was used as leverage, and intimidation replaced professionalism. After six years of service, the employee was treated like a problem to be removed.

4.0
Nov 10, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible hours, good work culture, engaging work

Cons

questionable communication, mediocre benefits, traditional work style

1.0
Aug 14, 2025

Dawn of the Final Day

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working at this company offers several notable advantages. The standard working hours are flexible, allowing for a balanced schedule akin to traditional banking hours. The dress code is casual, with jeans being perfectly acceptable attire for daily wear. There's ample opportunity to delegate tasks to interns, which can streamline your workload. Additionally, having established connections within the organization can provide a certain level of job security and influence.

Cons

Working at this company has been an... interesting experience, to say the least. Here, management is less about mentoring and more about micromanaging with a side of condescension. Their ideal leader seems to be someone who thrives on belittling staff and lacks the emotional intelligence to talk to others on a normal plane. Management here operates on a unique philosophy: “leadership through profanity.” Supervisors seem convinced that yelling and cursing are motivational tools, and if you’re not inspired by verbal abuse, well, clearly you’re the problem. Try reporting it to HR? Bold move. Odds are, you’ll be the one getting written up. Raising concerns or pointing out unprofessional behavior is treated like a personal attack on the company’s fragile ego. Too many complaints and—poof!—you’re on probation. A few weeks later, you’re escorted out like you just committed corporate treason. It’s almost impressive how swiftly they can turn accountability into a punishable offense. Despite a growing pile of HR complaints, supervisors don’t just survive—they get promoted. Meanwhile, the talent they’ve driven out is replaced with silence and confusion. Certain individuals have turned phone-scrolling into a full-time job—roaming the halls and camping in the restroom instead of actually working, because the work produced is subpar—and somehow, they remain in their roles without any accountability. This company should not hire due to familial connections within upper management, as it shows clear bias. Meanwhile, actual contributors are shown the door. Management loves to say they’re “here for you.” And they are—if by “here” you mean “ready to ignore your concerns and quietly blacklist you.” The favoritism is so blatant, it’s almost charming. Leadership operates in a vacuum, making decisions that benefit themselves while junior staff are left wondering if they’ve wandered into a parody of corporate dysfunction. The office culture? A mystery wrapped in apathy. Leadership has no idea what it is, so they hand it off to employees like a group project no one volunteered for. The company refuses to invest in its people—no resources, no team-building, not even basic amenities. Morale is circling the drain, and management acts shocked when engagement flatlines. It’s hard to feel inspired when you’re treated like a line item and the company can’t even afford to pitch in for office events. The changes that have occurred within leadership in this office are a masterclass in corporate chaos. Under their reign, top talent has fled while incompetence flourishes. So, if you’re looking for a workplace where toxicity is standard, hard work is punished, HR is ornamental, and leadership is blissfully unaware, Huitt-Zollars might be your dream job. Otherwise, consider this your warning label.

Viewing 7 - 9 of 118 Reviews

Glassdoor has 130 Huitt-Zollars reviews submitted anonymously by Huitt-Zollars employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Huitt-Zollars is right for you.