ScriptPro reviews

3.5

65% would recommend to a friend

(273 total reviews)
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Michael E Coughlin

65% approve of CEO

49% positive business outlook

ScriptPro has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 273 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ScriptPro 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

273 reviews
1.0
Jun 21, 2015

Beware

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great industry niche. Solid engineering team. CEO has built solid industry relationships. Larger IT staff for company size. Nice facilities and campus.

Cons

Extremely flat organizational structure (family owned and run). Tight with cash. Struggles through change management. Huge departmental silos and lack of synergy. Poor ethics at top level.

2.0
Sep 21, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This section exists in [Pt. 1].

Cons

... continued from [Pt. 1] Middle management suffers. First, in their defense, they are worked incredibly hard and do not receive just compensation. On-call rotations are murderous to these ranks and to the upper ranks of analysts who participate in said joy. A five minute discussion with one of these individuals will show a tired, unhappy patron of the Blackberry-ball-n'-chain. They will admit, behind closed doors, that they grow tired of answering questions from call after call of analysts who HAVE NOT completed their due diligence and appointed troubleshooting basics. On the other side of the coin, however there are those who push back on experienced analysts as if their response to inquiry was chiseled into stone and is used on all as a template -a robotic spewing of disrespect, in many ways. Immediately after this, meetings will be held to ensure that employees know they are to respect their superiors - effectively a ScriptPro tea party in the making. During my tenure, I did not put up with this treatment when it was administered to me. I may say with honesty that it did not happen to me, namely, often enough to generate much anger; but can simultaneously say that there are an exacting multitude currently employed who are literally afraid to speak up for fear of being eliminated for having an opinion. Case in point, an employee in a management position was purported to have been eliminated because his style did not "fit". His style - also rumored - was that of a free-thinking individual seeking to change things for the improvement of his group. That is incredibly sad. Next, I come to pay/salary. Because I am not a person to place all stock in material things, I will not linger here with this point long. However, because I am a very realistic person who knows that money (not promises) provides for families in this world today, it will be covered thoroughly enough to get the point across. I do not purchase bread at the grocery store with a smile and a promise. For several years, I received small, but regular raises. This was expected. My performance was middle-of-the-road to high as conveyed by my direct managers at the time. This was reflected in pay increases, steady but small. I was contented. Next came a few years of hardship for the company, again, not a deal-breaker in and of itself. The promises began. If we work hard, we are rewarded. I am a proponent of that system. It did not, however work this way. New employees can be hired in at levels above current employees who have more experience/training/education than them and the experienced employee is kept at the same salary for several years concurrently (effectively, a decreasing salary) simply because he/she does not speak up. If you don't make waves, you're liked. If it's at the expense of your well-being, isn't that reason enough to make yourself heard? Lastly, I cover a specific problem the CS department endures. This is the aspect of clearance for the Department of Defense and the Department of Justice. This requires background checks and money to cover sponsors. Those with clearance are berated day in and out by analysts and management who do not enforce the idea that the entire group shares the load. What is impossible to work without clearance can be saved for the analyst who does, however the basics are always the same and must be addressed. The customer suffers in cases where this does not happen. The company does not have the backbone to demand help getting more analysts clearance if the need for additional world-wide remote support grows; nor will it supply adequate funds in the same regard.

1.0
May 10, 2022

Most honest review

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Let me start off by stating the benefits of working at ScriptPro.. open bar at Christmas party and beautifully landscaped campus.

Cons

Now for the issues they have as a whole, and within the Sales Department in particular: Unfortunately some at ScriptPro do not have the best interest of their employees at heart. Regardless of the type of complaints taken to HR they generally fall on deaf ears, and this has been particularly true in the Sales Department. Numerous employees have gone to HR, the CFO and CEO about serious and disturbing issues going on within the department and they have all turned a blind eye. The issues including the following; making the team watch management do push-ups as their “reward” for meeting goals assigned to them, making inappropriate comments in reviews/meetings/team huddles, lashing out on employees if they stand up for themselves, making a scene during a team dinner at a restaurant - so bad the bar staff asked them to leave, belittling both male and female staff in front of others or one-on-one, and don’t get me started on the “boys club” comments. Several of the females felt very uncomfortable just having them on the same floor, not to mention being in their office by themselves. They were given several weeks to improve their behavior and, when that didn’t happen, they “demoted” them by moving them to another building and letting them build their own team. Fast forward a couple of years and they have been moved back and promoted, bringing their new team with them. They are a master of taking credit for other’s hard work. Needless to say, over a dozen good people have left over the past couple of years because of them. Moral of the story is: If you want to go to work everyday to be belittled, unappreciated, never get a considerable raise (due to beautiful landscaping) and feel like you need therapy after working with the Sales Department Management then ScriptPro is the company for you!

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ScriptPro Response
4y
Thank you for taking the time to provide feedback. We are always looking for ways to improve and appreciate your comments. We would like to learn more about your experience at ScriptPro and invite you to reach out directly to awicinski@scriptpro.com.
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