TriNet reviews

3.4

47% would recommend to a friend

(1,356 total reviews)
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Mike Simonds

57% approve of CEO

41% positive business outlook

TriNet has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 1,356 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The TriNet 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

1K reviews
5.0
Aug 5, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I've been with TriNet for about 5 years now and this is a great place to build your career. I came on with little experience and was met with great coaching, dedicated mentors and a strong team culture. Folks here genuinely want to help you succeed. Needless to say, you have to be a self-starter. Nothing is handed to you, but we do a great job of team-selling and group coaching. Another reviewer mentioned a toxic environment with shark tank bullying sessions. That couldn't be further from the truth. Shark tanks (role plays) are done by mentors, leaders, peers etc. with the sole purpose of helping each individual overcome their fears/weaknesses in public speaking and running a confident meeting. Those shark tank sessions were absolutely vital to my success and prepared me for the toughest of meetings. I wouldn't trade that experience in for anything and I think anyone who would take issue with those sessions is not taking his/her personal and professional growth seriously. And for what it's worth, I've never heard a group of people celebrating or making fun of someone who had a rough meeting. Not once in 5 years.

Cons

Any company that is growing to the size that we are will have growing pains. That's to be expected. I'm of the belief that giving feedback and trying to fix things is the winners' mentality - not complaining. My experience has been that YOY, we are only getting better and more efficient - especially around how we service our 17k clients. Sure, I get frustrated from time to time, but when given the feedback, our team leaders improve case over case.

3.0
Mar 11, 2019

An enduring game of roulette

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

TriNet has a large pool of amazing and talented people, and your experience largely depends on whether or not you are lucky enough to land in one of the teams made up of great people. Total compensation is competitive for Director levels up. Exceptional leadership exists on most teams. There are C-levels and VP-levels who make the effort to learn the names and roles of their extended staff, and personally meet with everyone during office visits and team-build outings. Decision-making is undeniably done in the best interest of the company. Unfortunately, this does not mean that there are not a few sour grape senior leaders who blatantly ignore anyone who is not a direct report and make decisions out of personal convenience.

Cons

While most new hires are required to meet both job qualification and cultural fit, pressure from the Board causes HR turns the blind eye for cultural fit when it comes to recruiting senior executives, many of whom demand further exception when their first course of action once hired is to bring in their own direct reports from previous companies. This leads to friction between networked new hires and legacy staff and eliminates opportunities for promotion for legacy staff. Because cultural fit is not a requirement for senior leadership, executives butt heads in battles of power struggle and finger-pointing. Colleagues in liaison roles like project managers and business partners get torn apart from receiving contrasting direction from different leaders. Some direct results: • Turnover is extremely high on all levels, and nearly all departments restructure frequently every 2 years or so. There is heavy loss of knowledge transfer, and new leaders often end up trying to reinvent the wheel. • Failure of leadership to operate as one cohesive unit leads to the formation of numerous silos across the organization. I’ve seen teams where colleagues are empowered and encouraged to develop their roles, and others where the manager openly tells the team they were not hired to think on their own. • Employee programs/perks rolled out and announced in internal memos get disavowed by new leaders unfamiliar with existing processes, and immediately cease to exist without further notice. • Core values, something that should never change, get refreshed as part of the wave of new initiatives from new leadership. • When confronted about the fallout ranging from topics like poor communication to departmental layoffs of long-time 10-20 year colleagues, the CEO pleads the fifth and simply says he has to support the decisions of his new leaders.

1.0
Dec 6, 2017

Account Executive

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good base salary and good benefits

Cons

Company has know idea what it is doing. Not handling investors money correctly.

Viewing 85 - 87 of 1,356 Reviews

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