TD reviews

3.8

69% would recommend to a friend

(22,190 total reviews)
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Raymond Chun

71% approve of CEO

62% positive business outlook

TD has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 22,190 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The TD employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Financial Services industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

22K reviews
1.0
Dec 14, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Entrepreneurial environment, fully vested 401k contributions after one year of service, good benefits, decent time off (PTO) accumulation rate.

Cons

I accepted this low paying FSR role knowing full well that it was an entry-level avenue towards becoming a financial adviser. I was told on the interview that FSR's are responsible for some customer service, but their primary focus should be helping customers achieve their financial goals. That was a bold faced lie. This job is 97% customer service and 3% Financial Services. You will NEVER get a chance to meet your FSR goals since you are constantly handling petty customer service issues. The FSR's that do meet their goals are far and in between and either have a good branch management support system or are in a demographically beneficial area that make financial sales easier. Management has no clue how to actually run a bank branch and they are lazy. Technically, the senior teller makes the schedule for everyone so management truly does nothing and looks good doing it. The place runs itself, which is sad because it seems as though the inmates are running the asylum. You are basically a well dressed customer service representative who just so happens to have a handy life and health insurance license. There is no signage or anything advertising that there is an FSR on duty at the branch, and the FSR has no office (nor the manager). The FSR role is a complete and utter joke. How can I advise anyone when I work at what is the equivalent of a banking transaction truck stop? Employees are lazy and want everything handed to them and do not understand the most basic of tasks. Your schedule will say you get off at 5:30 when in fact, you get off at 6:15 because you are busy helping the teller's ship money out for the next day. There is no work/life balance in this role. Take this job only if you are really hard pressed for money or (gulp), experience. Heed my words, run from the FSR role. TD seems like they really haven't figured out the FSR role and it's a shame because they really could have something great if they just model what the other big banks are doing.

5.0
Feb 2, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great leadership, strong risk and controls, very progressive yet TD never takes risk that it doesn’t understand. Strong balance sheet with outstanding financial discipline.

Cons

There are not many cons to TD and working at TD. Strength in risk and controls leads to a slower process for decisions. As an employee and a share holder I am proud of the approach and manner that TD manages the decision on the future of the business

1.0
Nov 7, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Unfortunately this box requires at least five words.

Cons

Schedules are never steady. There is no room for advancement because the supervisors refuse to coach anyone, not to mention that there is hardly ever any time with them being so understaffed. Since their "stores" are constantly understaffed, managers just hire anyone who walks through the door. Therefore crippling the work environment, which then cripples the ability to excel at giving great customer experiences. So the fire and rehire cycle continues. When a good employee is actually hired ( this employee must work the teller line like a boss because remember that they are understaffed, this employee must make sure customers in the lobby are smiling, and all the while trying to complete online training courses that are mandatory to pass in order to keep your job) this is the employee that gets let go for not being able to balance a cash drawer in all the chaos. During teller training, instructors do not lay out counterfeit bills and ask that you familiarize yourself with the textures and the images. So if your that hard working teller that's been with the company (in the same position) for almost three years, that's on probation already for balancing, you just lost your job over a counterfeit note.

Viewing 4 - 6 of 22,190 Reviews

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