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Social Security Administration

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Social Security Administration reviews

3.0

36% would recommend to a friend

(2,782 total reviews)

Carolyn W. Colvin

34% approve of CEO

23% positive business outlook

Social Security Administration has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 2,782 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Social Security Administration employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Government & Public Administration industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
1.0
Nov 29, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Accrued sick and annual leave. Flexible schedule.

Cons

Poor management. Tedious & repetitive job. Limited career opportunities. CSR position is capped at GS 8. Inefficient in all processes. Low pay for the amount of work and level of stress faced on a daily basis. Nepotism.

2.0
May 7, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

As long as you don't get hired in as a Service Rep/Contact Rep, the pay is decent. If you are hired in as a Service Rep/Contact Rep or Teleservice rep, your pay will be on par with a McDonald's worker. PTO is decent. Insurance is decent and, I when i say decent, I do mean decent, not wonderful, not excellent, just decent. 401k type employer match is decent (up to 5% match).

Cons

Workload is astronomical. You will need to work at least 10 hours of OT per week to keep up with workload. You will spend most of your evenings and Saturdays working OT and some Sundays too. Although Social Security touts it's work life balance, the scale def. tips towards working. Most managers have little training with respect to how to manage, so just use your imagination on how that works. Promotions to management and other higher paying positions are often awarded by the volume of work that gets processed. This causes some employees to take "shortcuts" and not properly process work, so while they are promoted, you are left to clean up the mess their "shortcuts" created and left to deal with the angry clients that have to suffer through lost checks, incorrect payments, and the debts that the shortcuts created. Annual bonuses are given, but they usually are equivalent to less than 1% of your pay, so a $300 yearly bonus is about average. Training is terrible. You will be watching videos, alone in a room, and then after watching about 8- 12 weeks of videos your are expected to interview the public non-stop and not make any mistakes. You will have very little assistance. The mentor assigned to you will be expected to keep up with his/her own astronomical workload and at the same time train you. As a result, your training suffers. The mentor usually values keeping up with their own workload over training you because, if they don't keep up, they will loose their job. Employee reviews are so subjective that it is unbelievable. When someone quits, retires or gets fired, a replacement is not hired. If they are replaced, it may be years later. When they are replaced it will take years for the new employee to start performing at a fully competent level. Most times, the new employee quits or is terminated because they cannot keep up with the astronomical workload, feel the training is inadequate, and/or cannot take harassment from management. Systems are very old. Most run on a DOS based system. They are no where near user friendly. It is hard to find instruction manuals and when you can find an instruction manual the directions are poorly written and confusing. You are mostly interpreting law. The legal manuals are confusing and often conflicting. You must then take these confusing and conflicting legal matters and explain them to the general public who have varying degrees of education, may have intellectual disabilities, and may speak little or no English. If you speak another language you will usually be forced to take on a more complex and larger workload with no extra compensation. While new computer systems are being rolled out, they are often worse than the old systems they replaced. Other than talking to your Union Rep, there is not much of a chance to give feedback. Social Security used to have a program to submit suggestions on-line, it has since discontinued this program. Management rarely acts on the Unions' concerns. Due to the above Cons, and the fact that most of the staff is aging baby boomers, there is a high turnaround. Very large brain drain problem. Once you get hired and assigned to an office, you are pretty much stuck there. Don't expect to transfer any time soon. Offices tend to have an unspoken anti-poaching policy, so if a job opens up in an office you want to transfer to, expect that you will not get that job. Since it is hard to obtain hiring authority and because within management promotions and bonuses are often giving to those whose staff processes the most work, managers tend to do whatever they can to keep you in their office, including but not limited to giving terrible references for all employees up for promotion, giving any employees with any chance of getting promoted terrible written reviews. I have seen people who were informed of a transfer or promotion only to have it blocked by their managers. There is a blame the victim and blame the whistle blower culture. If you come to management with a problem, you are just making more work for them. The attitude I most often perceive is that they didn't get promoted to do more work. They saw their predecessors and noticed that they seemed to have cushier jobs with less work, so they aimed to be promoted to those jobs. It's often best to just leave them alone then bother them with problems.

1.0
Aug 31, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits , stepping stone for other federal agencies

Cons

This is the WORST place I’ve ever worked. Nepotism and favoritism runs rampant through here . Upper management is incompetent and only hired because of family members or sororities etc . They need an extensive training on discrimination. Very hostile work environment and don’t you dare speak up for yourself because now you are labeled “ difficult “ and they will do everything in their power to blackball you .

Viewing 61 - 63 of 2,782 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,926 Social Security Administration reviews submitted anonymously by Social Security Administration employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Social Security Administration is right for you.