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Veracity Insurance Solutions

Engaged Employer

Veracity Insurance Solutions reviews

3.5

57% would recommend to a friend

(53 total reviews)

Daryle Stafford

79% approve of CEO

64% positive business outlook

Veracity Insurance Solutions has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 53 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Veracity Insurance Solutions 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

53 reviews
1.0
Jul 26, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Occasional food truck days, quarterly bonus opportunities, and annual Christmas party.

Cons

PTO isn’t really yours, managers are inconsistent and inexperienced. Work is heavily scrutinized and micromanaged. No organization or logical workflow. A lot of favoritism and promises of advancements that go unfulfilled. No project management systems or knowledge of digital media marketing strategies. No such think as flex time. No training provided.

1.0
May 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Cash bonuses and initiatives, gifts, and collaboration can be positive when teams are aligned and working toward the same goals.

Cons

This is a high-pressure corporate environment where employees are constantly encouraged to work harder and push toward the next reward, while real job security feels limited. No company can guarantee stability, but this has been the only workplace in my career where the lack of security felt so strongly present across teams. This is also the only company I worked for where computer activity was heavily monitored and recorded. I was aware of people on the marketing team being let go partly due to productivity-tracking concerns, which felt unusual in a field where outcomes and strategic thinking generally matter more than constantly appearing busy. The overall environment also felt highly political. I was advised on how to manage perceptions, appease the right individuals, and navigate internal dynamics in order to get work done effectively. Coming from more agile and efficient environments, this was a difficult adjustment. Maintaining the existing order and protecting appearances often seemed more important than direct communication, practical problem-solving, or genuine collaboration. The culture leans heavily into toxic positivity - very focused on being “nice,” but not always constructive or transparent. There seemed to be a strong emphasis on maintaining appearances and keeping things upbeat publicly, while criticism and frustrations were often discussed privately behind back instead of being addressed directly - for example, when there was a concern with my productivity (after I've been with the company for only 3 months and we switched to a whole new platform and a bunch of new processes), the concerns were raised not during regular 1:1 meeting but in a meeting with other stakeholders, while it would have been more effective to set individual goals to help new employees succeed. Leadership challenges within SEO were also difficult. The person overseeing SEO comes primarily from a content SEO background (not full scope SEO) and heavily controls SEO decisions, including what recommendations can or cannot be made and how they are presented to content teams. At the same time, the SEO team was under constant pressure from the leadership to improve performance despite having limited autonomy to implement meaningful changes. Expectations and authority often felt disconnected. There also seemed to be a tendency to blame former employees for ongoing problems rather than addressing leadership or structural issues directly. I regularly heard negative comments about previous employees on my team, as well as other members of the marketing team. This contributes to culture where employees become more focused on protecting themselves than solving problems effectively. The SEO team does constant rework of recent content work (blog posts from last year, for example) because the team was prevented from providing effective recommendations the first time around. A lot is controlled by the predetermined brand narrative vs. being actually useful and beneficial for the users, so as an SEO, it's really hard to be effective. The onboarding experience was stressful. Expectations shifted frequently, were not always documented clearly, and were sometimes communicated inconsistently. I personally struggled to understand what success actually looked like, and many employees told me they spent much of their first year questioning whether they were meeting expectations or whether their jobs were secure. From my experience, employees who were more outspoken, challenged ideas directly, or pushed for changes tended to run into conflict with management more quickly. The environment seemed to work better for quieter personalities who were more comfortable going along with decisions rather than questioning them. In my experience, HR felt more focused on protecting the company’s image than supporting employees in a genuinely human way. Interactions often felt impersonal and procedural rather than empathetic or supportive. Benefits were average overall, leaning more towards the lower end. The strong work-life balance promoted during hiring also did not consistently match the day-to-day experience, and some people told me they work sometimes longer to maintain job security, so it seemed like just working normal hours was not enough.

1.0
Mar 18, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

at the time of writing this post, there are some amazing individuals who really break their back trying to solve problems for this company.

Cons

There is a crazy focus on AI with no plan. but the thing is, the executive team has no clue what they are doing, like no joke, one of the executives sent out an email about how to use AI more and the example they gave was using AI to help plan what food to cook at a party. how in the heck does this relate to work? not only this, but I was asked by several upper management if I was worried about when AI would take my job. because I guess they all believe that my role as a Data Engineer is no longer necessary. on top of this, the leadership over the propriety built system is a mess, the legacy platform has huge issues with corrupting data, forcing the accounting team to take 2 weeks a month to manually correct the data before they send it to their carriers, but mistakes get through anyway making their partnered carriers mad. The product team has no way to move forward because the built out system is too clunky and everything is getting harder to manage. you may be reading this not into tech, but trust me, your job will be affected negatively because of the system was built by the dev team, whom despite all the things I tried to tell them, deny that the system has problems. even though the company is literally opening themselves for a lawsuit . The biggest kicker of all though is that none of this will be fixed because an executive owns the Dev team, like literally, they have a contracting company that hires the dev team and holds the code repositories. so if they don't like the direction the company is going, they can hold the companies entire small business infrastructure over the head of the CEO to get what they want. last of all, the reason I left was because after working their for almost 2 years as the sole data engineer, building up infrastructure and helping departments get data using best practices, the dev team hired their own data engineer and had him give me a technical assessment, like a literal job interview, after two years of me showing the company all their problems (like how the executives said they didn't give refunds but I showed them that they did over 7 million dollars of refunds in the last couple of years). I quit the same day as that interview as it was apparent they did not value my contributions and I should find a company actually values what I do. Its only a matter of time before one of the companies partnering carriers realizes what is going on and decides to no longer do business with them, so regardless of your line of work, I would steer clear of this business but at a minimum, ask in the interview process about how well the team your hiring onto works with the dev team, and have them give examples about progress that's been made in the last 6 months. I'm sure there's nothing, because the dev team didn't do anything good for the business in the 2 years that I was there

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Veracity Insurance Solutions Response
2mo
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback and for recognizing the hard work of the individuals on our team. We take employee feedback seriously and are committed to building a workplace where people feel heard, supported, and set up for success. While we do not comment on individual employment matters or specific business assertions in a public forum, we know periods of change can create uncertainty, and we recognize that employees may experience those changes differently. At Veracity, we continue to evaluate how we work, how teams collaborate, and how we invest in the tools, processes, and leadership needed to support the business and our employees. We also know that clear communication, role clarity, and trust across teams are critical to a positive employee experience, and those are areas we continually work to strengthen. We appreciate the contributions made by former and current team members alike, and we wish you the best in your future endeavors.
Viewing 4 - 6 of 53 Reviews

Glassdoor has 54 Veracity Insurance Solutions reviews submitted anonymously by Veracity Insurance Solutions employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Veracity Insurance Solutions is right for you.