State Farm reviews

3.4

53% would recommend to a friend

(19,757 total reviews)
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Jon Farney

51% approve of CEO

47% positive business outlook

State Farm has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 19,757 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The State Farm employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Insurance industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

20K reviews
4.0
Jun 30, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Name recognition of State Farm is massive, and it's a trusted brand. It's a large and very stable company that is very conservative financially. I have no doubt that they really know how to manage investments and their money (they've done just that for 95+years now). If you're in Bloomington, IL (the HQ) your pay will be good given the cost of living there. It *will* be less than any place on the coasts, but again COL is so much less. If you're in other locations pay is only somewhat competitive. Of course the pension + 401k is a big hook for many, and it vests after 5 years, but to get any real value from the pension you need to work here 15+ years.... and that's exactly what most people here do. The other benefits here are good at least competitive with most companies. except we don't do the kinds of perks that most tech companies provide in terms of free food. The health insurance is Blue Cross Blue Shield and what we pay isn't massive. Rx co-pays are ok. If you choose a high deductible plan they'll throw $2k into a medical savings account that's use-it-or-lose-it each year but it covers a nice chunk of any medical care you may have during the first part of the year. The pace is is slower than most. Not that your workload won't be fairly high, but things are slow moving. People don't work long hours (unless they really like that kind of thing). It's a ghost town past 4:30 here (we work 8-4:15), and working the weekend is unheard of unless you're an part of the crew doing a release. The fringe benefits of working at SF and living in Bloomington, IL are pretty good if you have kids. They have SF Park that has a pool and mini-golf and sports courts galore as well as discount programs with local and national retailers. Work related stress is only as high as you let it be 95% of the time. There's very little environmental stress with the exception of the frustration and lack of hope in people's eyes you see when things fail to release or release quickly. Once you get in here, you'll never have to leave. Getting fired is next to impossible unless you break the law. If you're looking for someplace to land and then stay until retirement this is your place. I've had a few colleagues who've retired here who came for the last 10-15 years of their career and it worked out for them rather well. That's a pro for the person, but not for the company :).

Cons

State Farm is slowly but surely running itself into the ground, though I do not believe they'll ever go out of business they'll become much less relevant in the market over the next 5-10 years. Here are the reasons I see for that: 1) Technically we use outdated systems (well most insurance companies do) and it's been super hard for this organization to overcome them and try to come into the 20th century (yes I said 20th, because 21st century is a long way off here in most ways). 2) Culturally this place is holding on so hard to "State Farm Nice" and keeping their #1 status and fading glory (they don't know it's fading!) that they'll run a huge multi-year program throwing huge amounts of money at it and then when it produces next to nothing, they'll close it on schedule, call it a success and then move on to the next thing a bunch of consultants told them would help modernize the company. 3) In the desperation to get things done faster, SF is willing to push anything out into production no matter what the customer experience is. There's lately been a lot of pressure to simply show something happening so we strongly suffer from a focus on activity over results that have impact and/or high quality. 4) Their IT department is massive and moribund, with thousands of people who've been there for 20-30 years and have very few modern IT skills and a CTO who either cannot (because of company culture or inability... I really have no idea which) or will not push the company to move to become a technology powerhouse that it *could* be. Similarly he's not being truthful about what he can or cannot get the IT organization to do or not do... or he simply doesn't know. 5) Their approach to people/talent is relentlessly focused on the idea that people are interchangeable resources and you can take someone from Claims and have them do IT-related work and they'll be successful, or you can take an exec from the agency force and put them into marketing, or you can take a mainframe guy and put him into java or database management or IT security. Of course a few outstanding people CAN do this well, but most can't. They just don't understand people with specialized skill sets and hiring top talent. 6) Decision makers are so far removed from what's actually happening in the company and people are so unwilling to confront difficult topics (State Farm Nice) that they don't make good choices. I've heard some of the most ridiculous decisions and reasoning for those decisions that make me believe that the decision makers were fed misinformation or it was so badly mangled in the game of telephone (because individual producers simply don't get any significant amount of time with higher level people without close supervision and message control from their managers.) 7) Management, which is called "Leadership" internally, is usually anything but leading us. There are a few good ones, but more often they are managing their departments in a way to preserve the status quo and/or their influence/career. Top execs leadership style/philosophy is old-school and not very progressive. 1st line managers, like most companies, are a mixed bag. I've had some great ones and decent ones, and I have a few friends who have really terrible ones. 8) They're almost all old, white men who hold the actual reigns of the company, and the very top people have always been lawyers for the past few decades. (As a counterpoint, I do have to say that women are in many, many senior positions at the VP level and in the middle management layers around director level. Minorities of most types aren't terribly visible in management/executives, but the LGBTQ support form the company is high and highly rated).

1.0
Jul 28, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

State Farm is willing to invest in their employees by paying a salary to interns in training to become an agents. This is not common in the the insurance industry. They put you through very good training during that time. As an insurance company it is a very solid, stable and conservative company.

Cons

They treat agency interns brutally.They are very unforgiving of mistakes or failure to meet goals regardless of reasons. For part of your training they'll put you in an agents office who may or may not be concerned with your development. Who may or may not be competent themselves. The "family friendly" facade is just that - a facade. You better hit your goals and you better invest every last dime you have when you get your TICA contract. Even after working laboriously and spending your own money, if you are not hitting goals - regardless of whether your rates are competitive or not - they will send you walking. TICA stands for TEMPORARY Independent Contract Agreement. So after a year, if you aren't doing what they want you to you are out, no questions asked.

2.0
Sep 21, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This is a very large company with no shortage of work being that most people are required to have insurance.

Cons

The wonderful company culture died a very ugly death under the heading of cost savings with the new CEO who manages this mutual company as though it's a publicly traded stock company. They apply only bottom line mentality to many decisions that lack any logic in terms of what the customer expects. The tenured employees used to be seen as the company's greatest asset, but now they are clearly the greatest liability. The company is moving towards having all their employees working in brand new state of the art buildings located only in major metropolitan areas. The obvious downside is all the tenured employees aren't there, and are being laid off in favor of cheaper new hire replacements. The irony here is that the new hires cant maintain the workloads, so the company brings in hundreds of external independent contractors at different times per year...and they pay them far more than the tenured employees that are being forced out the door. You can only image the lack of care a temporary employee has to do the right things to satisfy a customer. What seems to have been overlooked is that happy employees make for happy customers. While the job is considered "professional", there is nothing actually professional about it. You work undesireable shifts, can't get time off, you're micro-managed beyond belief, you're day is scheduled to the minute for the entire time you're in the building, etc. If you have an unexpected sick child, or become unexpectedly ill yourself, you do have PTO available, but you will be penalized for using it. You get several "points" against you for each day you're unexpectedly sick, or have an unexpectedly sick kid. Once you receive 20 points...you are fired. That means people come to work sick and make everyone else sick as well. Now that employees are so miserable in "the new model", they no longer exercise the same care and dedication towards satisying a great customer base. In fact, employees are now measured purely by "call center" metrics, which capture how many widgets you produced (number of calls answered per hour and number of tasks completed). As any logical person would surmise, this creates the mentality of doing only the bare minimum in order for it to count toward your metric. This is in direct conflict with satisying customers who don't want to speak to someone that only cares about their hourly counts. They want someone that won't be penalized for providing great service (which takes a little longer). Afterall, that is why the customer pays for extra to be insured with State Farm. For these reasons, the wonderful employees that created what used to be a great company are leaving in droves! It seemed almost as if they were being encouraged to leave so they could be replaced with new hires that dont cost as much. The saddest part is that many new hires only stay long enough to get through training. They quit long before they are valuable contributors because the working environment is so awful. The job itself has a rather significant learning curve in order to be effective. This used to be company where you could have a "career", but now you can only hope for a "job" that lasts as long as you can reasonably tolerate it. As such, the awful employee attrition rates paint a clear picture of why so many customers are also taking their business elsewhere. State Farm used to be a company that admittedly cost a little bit more than the competition. They owned that fact, but were ok with it under the reasoning that their service was so much better than the competition. They have now evolved (declined , actually) to a company that is still more expensive than the competition, and the service they provide is only marginal at best when compared its competitors. Customers and employees have rapidly lost confidence in this company that was once so great. It looks like the almighty dollar has won this contest. I sure wish they would realize how they trip over dollars to pick up dimes. I ultimately decided to take my career, and my numerous insurance policies, elsewhere. I couldn't bear the thought of subjecting myself to their poor claim service if I ever really needed their help recovering from the unexpected. It's quite sad to see how far they've deviated from all the things that once made them great. I'm sure the companies founder, G.J., is rolling over in his grave because his company has become all the things he set out to avoid.

Viewing 7 - 9 of 19,757 Reviews

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