gpac reviews

3.0

42% would recommend to a friend

(818 total reviews)

Matt Good and Ryan Good

56% approve of CEO

44% positive business outlook

gpac has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 818 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The gpac employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Human Resources & Staffing industry (3.8 stars).

Reviews by job title

818 reviews
3.0
Sep 13, 2021

Make the calsl

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Opportunity to make money, to a degree

Cons

If you find a way that works for you, you can’t venture off their beaten path.

1.0
Sep 10, 2021

DO NOT WORK HERE!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote work available for employees.

Cons

Horrible pay, major micro management, poor training, bait and switch with type of recruitment recruiters can perform, unprofessional higher management, toxic culture, company uses software on work computers to listen to recruiters, expected to train and learn on your own time without compensation, recruiters are expected to pay back salary while training before being paid straight commission, company seeks desperate people to cold call and use poor selling methods to meet quotas. Expected to work with professionals to fill high paying jobs and are told from day 1 that you do not have to know anything about the industry you are recruiting for. Instead of giving intelligent responses to clients you are trained to answer questions with a questions. This is VERY insulting to companies hiring you to recruit for them. Very high turn over rate.

1.0
Sep 10, 2021

Yes, it is a scam.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Many of the positions are remote.

Cons

First and foremost it’s a call mill. You’re making cold calls all day to unsuspecting companies hoping that one of them will somehow need the type of candidate you are marketing. This inevitably leads to anger on part of the company as you’re essentially a door to door salesman bothering then during work hours. Be prepared to be yelled at and hung up on a lot if you manage to get someone on the phone at all. There is an emphasis on “fishing”. Meaning you will contact companies “selling” candidates that don’t actually exist to trick them into signing the gpac agreement under the guise that you will then send that person over to them. If that somehow works you’re then told to tell them that that person already accepted another job but I’ll go out and find someone like them. This works the other way as well by contacting individuals with fake job orders and if they’re interested you’re told to tell them the position was already filled. AKA ITS A SCAM. When I heard the words “search consultant” I was immediately concerned as titles like that or “account executive” are given to low level employees to attach some unearned importance. Those typically follow scam businesses to assign false legitimacy to their operation. But, against my better judgment I continued on with this company anyway. You should ALWAYS be concerned when a company is always hiring. The turnover rate is extremely high. Your coworkers will change monthly if not weekly. Into the specifics: the immediate leadership or “coaches” put all their emphasis on arbitrary metrics. Meaning your success and effort is not measured by the connections or placements you make but by the busy work you record. All they want to see is that you have made a certain amount of calls, sent a certain amount of bulk emails or “bulks”, send a certain amount of LinkedIn messages etc. THATS ALL THEY CARE ABOUT and that’s all they want you to do. This would all be fine if it didn’t result in “gaming the system” and suggestions from the coaches to fake a lot of what was being done. Make cold calls, log in fake send outs (interviews) so they can hit their number for the day. As long as you make those calls it doesn’t matter what happens. You could call fake phone numbers all day as long as you made a lot of them they were happy. Any success an individual recruiter has will be because of their own methods which 9 times out of 10 do not involve any of the metrics the coaches are concerned with. If you ARE somehow successful at making a placement get ready to be responsible for collecting the fee from the hiring authority. That’s right it’s THE INDIVIDUAL Recruiters responsibility to collect the fee for gpac. So after you’ve just spent weeks facilitating a relationship between two professional parties you then have to make the call yourself demanding the money. Not only is that entirely inappropriate for a recruiter to do it’s well outside the realm of something a recruiter is ABLE to do. Gpac has a legal team, an hr department, it department, customer service etc, by no means should collections fall to the recruiter. Additionally, the coaches will congratulate you on a placement and in the same sentence tell you to keep making calls and line up more sendouts. Top to bottom this whole operation is a toxic disaster.

Viewing 589 - 591 of 818 Reviews

Glassdoor has 866 gpac reviews submitted anonymously by gpac employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if gpac is right for you.