Saela reviews

3.9

67% would recommend to a friend

(253 total reviews)

Mitch Smith

47% approve of CEO

63% positive business outlook

Saela has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 253 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Saela employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

253 reviews
1.0
Dec 14, 2016

Well then...

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The branch level isn't bad. I worked with a lot of really good guys, my branch manager being one of them. That's pretty much it.

Cons

Pay - I can only speak as a technicIan. Your pay is a percentage of the service price you do with no base salary. That means your pay depends on 2 things: the price the salesperson sold the service for, and whether or not the customer actually allows you to do the service. We come into work at 7am and they have time windows as late as 5-9 pm. That means if you have 16 stops on your route, 6 cancel (which I've seen) and your last customer with a 5-9 time window doesn't want you showing up till 7 (which I've seen) as a beginner tech you can look forward to making around 90 dollars after working over a 12 hour day. On top of that, if one of your customers schedules a reservice, you lose half the money you made doing the regular service...regardless if the reservice was even needed. Benefits - no 401k (yet), Humana Healthcare and no dental provided. No paid sick days. No holidays, and after working with edge for a whole year, they reward you with one single paid day off. Better hope you don't have a death in the family or you'll have to choose between mourning and putting food on the table. We were literally told to "spend wisely" over the holidays because of all the unpaid days we get off around that time. Got a family to provide Christmas for? Sorry. Micromanagment- the branch managers get a text if we go over 70mph in the work vehicle, they get a text if the engine idles for more than 15 minutes too. During the winter we can leave the engine running if the temp is below 32, but that's to keep the lines from freezing and not for comfort, so look forward to hot hot summers. They also do what they call "sneak attacks"...where they park down the road and watch you do a service without you knowing. Where I can understand trying to manage your employees you can only treat them like liabilities for so long before they don't feel appreciated. Training- we have mandatory training every morning. Doesn't sound too bad, right? Eh. The majority of the training consists of customer interactions and not the services themselves...and just last week everyone in my branch was handed a list of things edge could fire all us for as training. You spend your first week riding with a trainer learning various services...but the likelihood of you getting to see every service edge offers in action is slim to none, so look forward to being sent to jobs with not knowing what to do Routing- you're promised a route in the area you live during the hiring process but it took a couple months before I wasn't having to drive an hour after my route just to get home. Makes the whole Micromanagement regarding letting your engine idle so you'd have a cool/warm truck to get into after your service seem redundant. They wanna save fuel costs but send you an hour away from where you live for services. The call center: the level of communication with the call center between the customers and techs is ridiculous. I've gone to initial services that cancalled because the call center did not make the customer aware that there is a term obligation. That's drive time and money out of whatever techs pocket that happens to. Not to mention, the lack of knowledge the call center has about what the techs actually do. Remember how I said if your customer schedules a reservice after you do their regular service, you lose half the money you made? Well I've literally gone to a reservice to re-granulate a customers yard with granular insecticide because someone at the call center told that customer that it would work against the worms their dog had. That's right...parasitic worms inside their dogs body. Someone lost half their money from their original service there because someone at the call center didn't know the difference between parasitic worms in an animal and worms that actually live in the ground.

5.0
Dec 1, 2016

Pest Control Technician

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good money, you gain a lot of experience, gain customer service skills, competitive environment. I really liked my boss and the effort he put into helping me and training me.

Cons

Long hours, During the summers you start at about 6:30 AM and you work until aboutt 10:30 or 11:00 PM. You rarely have a bathroom that you can use, so you have to go out of the way to go to a gas station.

4.0
Nov 9, 2016

Customer Care Specialist

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent Incentives. Fun people to work with, but most positions have been changed now. I've heard it is much more fun to work in the winter (more downtime, and fun work activities). Fun culture and good values. Weekly inspiring workshops.

Cons

Working there during the summer was very busy. Difficult to get time off (even though there is no paid time off). Can be very demanding and tedious.

Viewing 238 - 240 of 253 Reviews

Glassdoor has 285 Saela reviews submitted anonymously by Saela employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Saela is right for you.