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Pomeroy Technologies

Engaged Employer

Pomeroy Technologies reviews

3.9

71% would recommend to a friend

(847 total reviews)
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Tom Signorello

82% approve of CEO

72% positive business outlook

Pomeroy Technologies has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 847 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Pomeroy Technologies employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

847 reviews
2.0
Jul 25, 2017

Management issues

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay and vacation policy was good.

Cons

Frequently made promises to many employees then conveniently did not remember what they promised. Kept key employees isolated and silo'ed from Corp.

1.0
Jul 3, 2017

Worst career decision I have ever made!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Not many, they certainly wanted to wow you with food when you did a good job, kinda like dog treats. The pros end there!

Cons

Simply a cattle call company, no leadership, poor direction and complete disaster of a business model from top to bottom!! Poor hardware, terrible software, do more with less a constant drum beat!! They dismissed anyone for any reason, and cronyism got anyone ahead, not hard work and dedication!!

1.0
Apr 13, 2017

Be afraid, be very afraid

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A few talented people that I started with, but they are all gone. Some mangers care about their people, but have their hands tied. “unlimited” pto if you can get approved and it doesn’t conflict with a project. Hard to rate the CEO when the one listed has been replaced already.

Cons

I really wanted to like the company, I really did. For an IT company pretending to be focused on delivering cutting edge technology to their customers, I have never seen such outdated equipment to work with for their staff. With so many consulting / MSP’s out there, you would think they would strive to be on the cutting edge of technology. Budget for new technology seems to be non-existent. If they are around in 5 years they will only be bush league in a major-league field. Technology will only step forward when a client demands it, and then there will be a mad scramble to get the technology. Yearly evaluations are a joke. 1-5 scale. I have never had a performance issue in my IT career and twice I got 2.x something. Their response, only a few people get 3’s, no one gets a 4 or 5. You know where this leads to, when merit raises go out, you are reminded of “your poor” performance. Trust me, they will fail you. As a result of this ridiculous rating system, people are often (de)motivated to only do the work of someone that is a 2.5, average. Some have pride and suck it up and do their best day to day but a majority of the others are there just to collect a paycheck. These guys clock in, sit at their desk, punt tickets they don’t feel like doing or researching and are just dead weight. Some of my team came into a client transforming them to a daily crit-sit creator into impeccable stability, basically transforming a business with f- reliability to a+ reliability. The only reward was the satisfaction people like us take in doing a good job. Upper management won’t recognize effort, as this again would set them up for a conversation with an employee about some sort of promotion, bonus. I think most of us would just settle for a “Job well done” email. Lack of sales of their offerings will most likely lead to their own demise. Backed into a corner with limited clients allows the clients to dictate what changes are made. If the the client says jump, Pomeroy asks how high. They shoot themselves in the foot all the time. I have worked in worse places but I have also worked in much better. Randomly, at least from a worker bee perspective, upper management is shown the door and you have a new email from the new guy, who does little to connect with the team. It’s as if they really don’t want you around. Low achievers are kind of overlooked, I guess they are cheap warm bodies. Innovation and hard work is not rewarded. I understand it is a business but you can treat your employees with respect, and if in the event you have to let them go, do it with some class. I truly don’t see this company surviving much longer if they continue down the same road. The tools they choose to support their clients are based purely on price, not evaluated against big players that have superior features. Maybe the margins are so low because they undercut competition so they can’t afford much else.

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Pomeroy Technologies Response
9y
Thank you for sharing your feedback. Our goal is to improve and raise our level of awareness based on your experiences, observations and perspective. I am sincerely sorry to hear that you were not recognized for the accomplishments you and your team achieved in transforming reliability from an “f- to a+” for your client. We absolutely should reward hard work and innovation! In the future, please reach out to your HR Employee Relations Teams to address these types of issues. We hate to lose good employees. We want to address issues BEFORE good employees leave. I hope that you continue to take pride in everything you do, believing it will pay off. As far as the CEO…”the one listed has already been replaced”….I am confused by this statement. Chris Froman has been with Pomeroy since 2007 and remains our current CEO in 2017. Thank you.
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Glassdoor has 921 Pomeroy Technologies reviews submitted anonymously by Pomeroy Technologies employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Pomeroy Technologies is right for you.