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Everforth Apex Systems

Engaged employer

Industry Leader for Lowest Pay - Anonymous employee Everforth Apex Systems Employee Review

1.0
Aug 11, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible PTO after one year of employment.

Cons

In an effort to “motivate” employees when morale is at an all-time low during an economic downturn, management created a presentation listing the names of every previous recruiter who left to join a competitor and has since been laid off. The delivery manager said if you don’t like your situation, you should just work harder. There was zero accountability for the excruciating pressure we are subject to given that the base pay is unlivable. In general, management will denigrate former and current workers if they aren’t in the room; they are used as examples to show that Apex never does wrong so individuals who are unsuccessful are just failures who didn’t work hard enough. The RTO policy is unevenly enforced. While most everyone is told to be in-office three days per week, the company’s top earners never go in and no one blinks an eye. In general, if you are high in spread, rules don’t apply to you but the moment you face attrition, buckle up because you are now among the lowly devalued “under performers” and everything you do heretofore is subject to scrutiny. The base pay is inhumane. Your commission will always ebb and flow with contractors quitting or clients cost-cutting, so it’s fair to expect fluctuations. As such, you should be able to fall back on a livable wage however the base pay is less than a full-time minimum wage worker’s salary. You cannot support a family on that, so many have to quit. Once you leave, your portfolio of business is handed to someone else on the team. S/he is expected to manage it with the same effort, but will receive zero commission. While Apex is still billing the client, instead of compensating the newly assigned recruiter or account manager, Apex deems it “ghost spread,” withholds commission from the front office worker, and keeps it for themselves. TL;DR: Toxic culture + shockingly low compensation

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Everforth Apex Systems Response
1y
Thank you for bringing this to our attention. We're sorry to hear that these actions/this experience did not reflect our core values. Please reach out to us at feedback@apexsystems.com with more details so we can further investigate. Thank you.

Explore other reviews about Everforth Apex Systems

5.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

fair salary and communication up to my first day

Cons

sometimes communication between agency and government is unclear, but I think that's more the government side than apex's doing

2.0
May 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Ability to work remotely still, however I am not sure how long that will last for me. They are pushing people back into the office. Autonomy & Independence - Strong ability to self-direct and own responsibilities - Involvement in high-impact work - Broad responsibilities that build transferable skills

Cons

- I feel like my role was created without clear definition or long-term planning. I - Needed help with my workload and, despite repeated requests over the past year, I still haven't received any help - Increasing responsibilities without proportional salary growth - Bonus structure adjusted to be more difficult to achieve - Multiple internal teams laid off. Work transitioned to outsourced teams with lower perceived quality - Reduced sense of ownership and care from external/outsourced teams - Movement away from autonomy toward increased oversight - Reduced trust compared to earlier experience - Meeting Overload (“Meeting Fatigue”) - Uncertainty About Future State - Concerns around remote work longevity - Lack of clarity on role growth, support, and company direction

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