Kforce reviews

3.8

74% would recommend to a friend

(2,614 total reviews)

Joe Liberatore

80% approve of CEO

69% positive business outlook

Kforce has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 2,614 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Kforce employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
2.0
Nov 21, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great group of peers, young and enthusiastic. There was a lot of laughter during non peak hours and after work happy hour.

Cons

An UNBELIEVABLE amount of turnover. In my first six months there, after my joining a 12 person team, 6 people departed the company, of which 4 were fired. This was on my team alone, and I'd estimate that out of 45 or so employees on the floor, there were 15 departures during this same time frame. This frequent turnover becomes one of the chief obstacles in client development. You will be assigned a set clients to work with and build your business (mostly existing clients that have a contract with the company). The problem is that so many people come and go via firing, the chances are good that the client you visit will have had several different reps in the last year alone (all of which left abruptly, I.e. fired, so there was no graceful transition). In introducing yourself, your presence is met with indifference and doubt because of the revolving door. After i had managed to build a relationship, several clients admitted to me that they had no interest in getting to know me since they (correctly) assumed that another rep would be doing this again relatively soon. On the temp side, teams are split between recruiters and sales people. This presented another complication related to turnover. Frequently the sales teams would bring in large blocks of orders, or even just one job. Unfortunately, due to inexperience and turnover, there often wasn't enough available bandwidth to ensure every job was covered. In this case, jobs are prioritized based on a formula developed to determine which ones are most likely to result in a hiring, making it hard to establish new clients because they lack the previous examples of our candidate being hired. Lest I leave out another important factor in determining priority: the name of the sales person who owned a job (surprise surprise! Favoritism runs rampant). Management is completely blinded by metrics. In addition to your run rate (revenue generated week/month) management is absorbed by two statistics: number of outbound business dials/calls made and the number of client visits made per week. There is an expected amount of each to be reached every week, no exceptions and the totals are broadcasted company wide first thing each Monday morning with your name listed next to it (every division included). In theory this is a fine tool to monitor associate activity, but it is also a business killer. Since management mandates that "X" number of client visits are made, the result is that associates are scheduling pointless meetings. These waste both the client's and your time and cause your client to end up resenting you. When faced with the choice of annoying a client or being reprimanded by your boss, associates most always choose option one (not completing the required dials and visits is the primary cause of firing at Kforce). During my time there, the sales side was structured so that each rep focused on calling/visiting a maximum of 5-7 different companies. If you are expected to make north of 300 dials and more than a dozen client visits each week, that doesn't leave room for much variety. As a result, there was frequent contact with the same decision makers in a short time frame. I can't tell you how many times my client would say "why are you in my office again, you were here two weeks ago". Truth is, they were right. In the staffing industry the most important factor in getting business from a manager is whether or not they like you. I would have to assume you'd get very annoyed if you were trying to manage the day to day of your business and the rep from a staffing agency (many of these managers had not yet even bought from us) keeps trying to meet with you by calling you, sending you marketing email blasts, and often is just showing up at your office once a week (the old "I was here meeting with your coworker and figured I'd drop in", let's ignore the fact that you've not replied to me after I've called you fifteen times this week and sent five emails). Please be advised that these meetings were imposed upon clients who didn't have a current job they needed filled (since these job orders were taken on the phone). I was encouraged to sit in their office weekly for half an hour "catching up with them" and asking probing questions about their organization. My favorite were the managers who were too polite to say no or kick you out, I sort of grew to appreciate their exasperated expressions as they glanced at their watches. Meetings were made just for the sake of making them. As a result, we frequently lost business from annoyed managers. This information was brought up repeatedly to management but always fell on deaf ears. So long as you met the expected call and visit number, none of this mattered.

1.0
Jun 8, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Not really too many pros at the end of the day, a nice starting salary helps keep you complicit for awhile but is quickly offset by an insurmountable amount of misery.

Cons

You're trained for 2 weeks & then thrown into the game, they say you have 6 months to "ramp up" but most of my colleagues and myself were terminated before we had a real chance to establish ourselves. I had actually been performing at my best (growing business amid a pandemic) when I was terminated, which was later determined as a wrongful termination by the state of Illinois. They fail to follow their own core values, and the Chicago office in particular has a disgraceful leadership team who would cover poor behavior of other leaders by offloading recruiters as scapegoats. It was a white-male dominant environment, and company culture equated to either liking football or being an outcast. I waited months to write this review in an effort to convey the level-headed truth without any lingering resentment, and the way in which I was deceived, misled, and even outright lied to makes this a very toxic experience that I have since grown from, but I would never recommend anyone else waste their time & talents on a company like Kforce in 2020 when there are so many better places of employment.

avatar
Kforce Response
5y
Kforce does not support or condone the workplace culture you have described. We are proud to be an equal opportunity employer, and value our diverse workforce. Please contact us directly so that we may investigate your claims.
1.0
Feb 12, 2019

Not Good

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Honestly, it was a really bad place to work. The culture is awful, the team is brutal, and you will walk out everyday feeling horribly stressed out like you cant make it another day.

Cons

It was terrible. Do not work here.

avatar
Kforce Response
7y
We're sorry to hear this job wasn't a good fit for you. We wish you good luck in your future endeavors.
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