IBC Bank reviews

3.2

62% would recommend to a friend

(761 total reviews)
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Dennis E. Nixon

73% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

IBC Bank has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 761 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The IBC Bank employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Financial Services industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

761 reviews
3.0
Jul 11, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The seasoned employees are nice, professional, and seem to truly believe in the company mission. The physical banks themselves are nice, spacious, and well made, providing a classy and professional atmosphere. Products and services offered are high quality and generally pretty straightforward. If you end up staying for a year or more, there is plenty of opportunity to move upwards. The bank itself is growing into new markets, building more branches, acquiring new financial services (retail banking + mortgages + all kinds of insurance, etc.). The bank prides itself on its customer service, and trains employees extensively to deliver a strong "IBC experience". It also regularly monitors the quality of customer service employees are giving to its customers by using frequent management reviews, coaching, and mystery shopping. IBC, as they put it, has never had a "down year", and follows federal regulation and policy well. It ranks high on bank transparency lists, and has been scandal-free since its inception. Lay offs are not a concern here.

Cons

IBC is very behind on the times. The computer software has not been updated in quite some time (Windows XP, Microsoft Office 2007) and the account management systems also need major updating. The internal website is not as intuitive as it should or could be. Internal information systems are very fragmented and thus inefficient. High employee turnover is the company's major issue. IBC requires no tertiary education for new hires who work in their branches. It appears that it is so desperate to staff its branches that it hires low quality people who lower morale and spread negativity in the workplace. Often, new hires lack maturity, social skills, and professional experience. Another problem is the salary, which is so low that the few people with professional experience and college education frequently leave for better pay and to work among peers. Additionally, the sales goals can sometimes be too high for even experienced people to achieve, and thus they quit before they are fired, leaving branches for new trainees who have no experience or expertise. As I stated in the pros section before, there is opportunity to move up. This is largely due to the high turnover rate. If you manage to make it there for more than one year, consider yourself promoted. The question is, promoted to what? There are plenty of lower management positions, but the pickings are slim if you want to move above lower management, and even slimmer if you want to move into a department outside of retail operations. IBC offers extensive training to its new hires (great), but the classes are way too long and drawn out, and often focus on topics that any mature professional would already know (a four hour lecture on telephone etiquette and a thirty minute exercise on proper hand shaking were completely tedious and unnecessary). The trainers tend to treat the trainees like children (as many of them unfortunately act that way). The communication system is extremely fragmented. People are often misinformed or uninformed about events and procedures that pertain directly to you, causing annoyances and resulting in wasting people's time. Lastly, as the company is a bank based out of Texas, it is unsurprisingly conservative. This would be fine, except that the CEO has recently attempted to push his political agenda onto employees, which has made some very uncomfortable.

3.0
Jun 25, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

IBC is a great starter company. Due to high turnover, it makes for good advancement. IBC has some good perks such as the gotcha doing something good program, the referral program, vacation after probationary period,etc. IBC does seem to care what the employees think. They do an internal anonymous survey for better changes within company and they have lunches with one of the higher ups who listens to the employees feedback. The lunch is also usually at a nice restaurant and company paid.

Cons

The bad part about working for IBC is that they have 7 day branches and it makes you feel as if you live there. We also work on the holidays, but don't get holiday pay.

4.0
Aug 12, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good training, Good growth opportunities,

Cons

below average pay, but benefits are ok

Viewing 751 - 753 of 761 Reviews

Glassdoor has 778 IBC Bank reviews submitted anonymously by IBC Bank employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if IBC Bank is right for you.