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Xactware Solutions

Now known as Verisk

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Xactware Solutions reviews

3.6

68% would recommend to a friend

(200 total reviews)

Mike Fulton

77% approve of CEO

59% positive business outlook

Xactware Solutions has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 200 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Xactware Solutions employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

200 reviews
5.0
Aug 24, 2020

Great, Stable Job

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

With everything happening with COVID-19, I really appreciate the steps taken to ensure employees are safe physically and professionally. Great environment and great stability. The opportunities for growth and development are really appreciated.

Cons

Every job has its stressful times. This company asks a lot of you but gives back a lot as well. Some policies seem handed down from Verisk for the sake of being "consistent" across Verisk. I'd like to see more discussions and adjustments to what we are already doing here, and more pros to the changes than just being consistent.

4.0
Aug 19, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good training. If you meet your stats you get a 20% bonus which is paid monthly. Gets busy during hurricane season but most of the time it is smoothe.

Cons

no part time options had to use own computer for work

2.0
Aug 14, 2020

If You're Looking for a Career, Don't Look Here

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Flexibility and work/life balance are high priority across the board - Good PTO and decent benefits - Great job security - Quality response to the Covid-19 crisis

Cons

- Career paths and career advancement are near non-existent. This place is the textbook definition of a "good ol' boys" club. Either you suck up and find yourself "in" that way, or you will always be out. - Professional development is also near imaginary. You are dropped into your seat with very little training and no continuing education whatsoever. - Raises don't happen. There is no regular schedule to raises and promised raises seem to never materialize. - "Good ol' boys" club means there is no room for women or any other kinds of diversity. Women are talked down to and there are remarkably few women in senior leadership and some of whom that are, are embarrassingly under qualified for their role, making them just figureheads of "we care about women and diversity". "Minor" instances of sexual harassment and dismissal of women for their feminine traits is the norm here. - Reorgs are standard and, unless you are in senior leadership, there is no consideration taken to the impact it will have on each employee's career, often leaving people to scramble and start near the bottom of the barrel in a brand new role there were not informed of until they are pushed into it. - Bonus structure is shrouded in mystery and inconsistent - This is a tech company run by the older generation and is run with no forward thinking, just looking back at the good old days. They are deeply resistant to change and the cost of forward progress is too much to pay. They had their niche and competition is ramping up in a serious way in that niche market and their response is simply, "oh well." - Innovation and getting out ahead of putting out fires raised by customers isn't possible in the mindset of leadership and you see that around every turn. Innovation always takes a back seat. - There are no consequences for failure. Which is great to a point, but poor leadership is rewarded. Failures that have cost the company dearly in a number of ways are not met with a chopping block of any sort. This leaves poor leaders comfortably in office indefinitely, forcing those that report to them to perpetuate this. - The culture is absolutely toxic. The focus is not on anticipating the needs of our customers and going above and beyond since that is not how you get ahead. Instead, you have to suck up to the right senior leader to land in a position of power (whether you are qualified for it or not), which leaves our customers high and dry until the senior leadership level, where they have the "luxury" of listening to customers. - Product is a defunct and broken organization. Very few, if any, in product leadership grew up from product management. They started in customer support, have been with the company for innumerable years, and were moved into project management roles they were not qualified for and that morphed into product management. No one is ever hired from the outside to fill a senior spot, which means there are no new ideas, or people trained in product leadership. Everyone pays the price for under-qualified product leadership.

Viewing 46 - 48 of 200 Reviews

Glassdoor has 209 Xactware Solutions reviews submitted anonymously by Xactware Solutions employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Xactware Solutions is right for you.