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HTS Engineering - Heat Transfer Solutions

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Toxic to work in IT (Kore Solutions) - Anonymous employee HTS Engineering - Heat Transfer Solutions Employee Review

2.0
Jun 20, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Regular employees are fun to work and interact with. Not much benefits outside of that.

Cons

Sr. Management is toxic. The culture created does not make the job enjoyable. Most people feel under appreciated, under pay and overworked. Covid time benefits are being clawed back. There is no focus on employee retention or satisfaction.

Explore other reviews about HTS Engineering - Heat Transfer Solutions

5.0
Dec 8, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice workplace; supportive team; hybrid

Cons

everthing's perfect, no cons at all

2.0
Mar 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Large company with a lot of growth in the region. Lot of local market penetration and name recognition. Good product lines to sell. You can make very good money if you get on the right teams. Useful business acquisitions within the umbrella of the company including an IT company that’s quick and mostly helpful, dedicated marketing department and an engineering company that’s can be a clutch resource when specifying designs. Some of the partners are good mentors and capable of mentoring and coaching up their teams to great successes.

Cons

This review addresses the service and parts team experience. The leadership structure in this division shows a significant disconnect from operational team needs. The management approach—authoritarian and transactional—feels misaligned with contemporary workplace expectations around respect and psychological safety. Support and Development Gaps The onboarding, training, and strategic guidance promised during recruitment are largely absent post-hire. New team members encounter a sharp contrast between recruitment messaging and day-to-day reality. This inconsistency undermines morale and team cohesion, particularly as the sales team struggles to leverage the existing install base effectively. Meeting Culture Issues Biweekly sales meetings function as performance interrogations rather than developmental forums. Selected team members are put on the spot regarding customer interactions while receiving real-time coaching designed to reinforce management's preferred narrative. This creates a compliance-focused, fear-based dynamic rather than a learning environment. Structural Problems The organization exhibits classic signs of extractive management: marginally attractive compensation used as a retention tool despite poor working conditions; minimal investment in team development; and a hierarchical structure that prioritizes control over collaboration. This creates a psychological contract violation—employees feel trapped by financial obligations while experiencing organizational neglect of their wellbeing. Bottom Line Persist in difficult roles when growth is possible. Persistence under extractive leadership with no commitment to employee development is a different calculation entirely.

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