NJM Insurance reviews

2.4

27% would recommend to a friend

(551 total reviews)

Mitch Livingston

42% approve of CEO

25% positive business outlook

NJM Insurance has an employee rating of 2.4 out of 5 stars, based on 551 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The NJM Insurance employee rating is 33% below average for employers within the Insurance industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

551 reviews
1.0
Oct 13, 2014

Heading in the wrong direction!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

401(m), good health benefits, FREE soup

Cons

No direction, change management failed, it's more about politics then results. Vindictive leadership. In the 15+ years I have seen too many good people get pushed aside. It's ashame as early on it was a pleasure to work at NJM. People cared for one another and there was growth. Since 2004 management decided to make changes which progressively got worse and created too many silos. Overall culture and values have severely diminished.

1.0
Oct 13, 2014

Run Forrest, Run!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Not many. The company as a whole is so far behind the times it's not even funny. The benefits were good, but I hear that they are being cut back also.

Cons

It is management by intimidation in the IT department. Unless you are one of the cronies you have no chance for advancement or even a decent raise. You are watched like a hawk and they don't care about the quality of your work. As long as you are at your desk when one of the "moles" comes by to check up on you you are fine.

5.0
Sep 21, 2014

NJM in late 2014

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I wanted to address some of the comments made on this site over the past year: -NJM Bank was sold largely because of Dodd-Frank banking rules. While the bank turned a small profit, the pain of dealing with federal banking regulations was too much for NJM (which is an insurance org at heart, not a bank). As far as I know, almost every single bank employee got a job at NJM if they wanted one, from entry level folks to officers. -Retiree medical benefits were changed, but, the change to retirees is more or less neutral. There wasn't actually a cut in benefits. However, instead of subsidizing X% of retiree medical, NJM is now going to subsidize $Y of retiree medical, with $Y about equal to the dollars in X% on average. The difference in the new plan is that retirees will be able to (will "have to") choose a their own health plan online instead of automatically getting (being "forced to have") NJM's blue cross/blue shield plan. If a retiree chooses an expensive health plan with all the bells and whistles, they will have to pay more out of pocket than they were before... but if they choose a cheaper/frugal plan, they would pay less out of pocket than they were before. Aside from the private insurance, NJM is still subsidizing Medicare the same way they were before. -Technology is old but it is being upgraded. It takes time to upgrade *everything*, but that is what NJM is trying to do (starting a few years ago and going for several more years into the future).

Cons

NJM is slow to adapt to new processes... whether they be new insurance products, new management styles, technology, etc. Sometimes that is actually a good thing, but usually it is bad. NJM is getting better in this regard then they were 10 years ago.

Viewing 502 - 504 of 551 Reviews

Glassdoor has 588 NJM Insurance reviews submitted anonymously by NJM Insurance employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if NJM Insurance is right for you.