employer cover photo

Frontline Managed Services

Is this your company?

Amazing-ish - Service Desk Analyst On A Dedicated Team Frontline Managed Services Employee Review

4.0
Mar 28, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

No experience needed. You work as a team. Learn something new everyday. Flexible-ish. Your team becomes your family. Amazing raises. Start at $10 in training for 5wks, go to $12.85 for 4months, 3wks. Then $13.93. From there, it's $1.00 raise every 6 months. I'm at $18/hr after 2yrs. Oppurtunity to change schedules at times.

Cons

It's like high school all over again. They play favorites. If you're not part of the "In Crowd", don't expect to move up. 1 person can do something and it's fine, another person can do the SAME thing and get written up or even fired for it. Can be a hostile work environment. Training teaches you NOTHING you actually need on the floor. They allow some users (callers) to verbally abuse us and if you mention it in the ticket and someone from the firm sees it, Intelliteach steps in and will NOT LET you speak to the firm. Not many opportunities to move up. A LOT of rule changes and attendance policy changes.

Explore other reviews about Frontline Managed Services

5.0
Oct 22, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Loved working here. The Toledo team is great.

Cons

I do not have any complaints

1.0
Jun 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work if you’re into that (personally I am not but to each their own)

Cons

I was hired for this role under a title that implies more engineering duties and deeper level work. Upon hiring, I quickly realized that what they’re doing is nothing more than glorified help desk. There is no sense of ownership or development on solving issues or the software they support, only a pressure to “white glove” each and everything at the moment to keep the metrics up. If it breaks again? Well that’s just an opportunity to make more money via billable hours. There is no actual IT knowledge base. You are just another meat puppet on the phone getting thrown issues you may have zero knowledge on and will be expected to figure it out, like getting thrown out of a helicopter into the woods with nothing and expected to survive. Supervisors regularly encourage the use of Google AI slop summaries to solve issues, and do not actually foster or maintain any IT knowledge, or have any of their own, other than frequently out of date knowledge bases. You will be reprimanded for taking additional time to actually resolve issues at a deeper level, only Band Aid fixes are encouraged as it will continually make them money to fix over time. Nothing matters but metrics, call queues, and an expectation to bend over backwards for technologically impaired “named partners” and are expected to cater for their each and every whim, no matter how impossible or impractical it may be. You know that one Spongebob episode? We shall never deny a guest, even the most ridiculous request? That’s their mindset, the partners know this, and they will abuse it at every opportunity. In meetings, you will be treated like an unruly 3rd grade classroom by overbearing managers in other states for attempting to socialize with your colleagues and break up the hours and hours of crushing isolation you will feel every day. There is no sense of coherence, the entire department is spread across the US and world at large. What is acceptable for one supervisor may be completely unacceptable and a terminable offense to another, and they appear to not communicate with each other in the least bit, as they are spread out across the country. Essential applications and functions are handled by employees across the world, in other time zones and some speak other languages. This is fine on its own, but when they are not available during normal business hours, it leaves you wide open to be verbally assaulted by those same named partners who don’t understand this, and also don’t have to abide by any HR policies regarding decorum as we don’t work for their firm directly, so it’s open season for a dressing down. Be wary, what’s on offer may not be what meets the eye.

1
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All