Great Place to Work! - Associate Project Manager II Infotech Employee Review

5.0
Oct 22, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Info Tech is a family-oriented company with great opportunity for advancement. The company's leadership is very in-tune with who is working hard to advance in his or her career, and promotes accordingly. Info Tech is blind to color and gender; this is evident since many top ranking leadership positions are held by minorities and women. Our director of corporate affairs, general counsel and director of HR are all women and the senior manager entrusted with overseeing the support of Info Tech's own portfolio of products is both female and hispanic. The CEO, VP and "heir", as I've read in a prior review, are all great. There aren't many companies with top level leadership that show the genuine care and interest in employees that I have witnessed while working at Info Tech. I feel that we are under great leadership now and will continue to be under great leadership for the foreseeable future. Info Tech's HR department is also great. They are a professional group of caring women who want the best for the company and its employees. There are programs in place allowing employees to be mentored by other employees who have experience in the focus of the mentee's desired career path. If you're looking for a fun work environment with a flexible schedule great benefits and pay consider Info Tech!

Cons

There are a few employees working for the company who like to play the victim and tarnish what should be a great reputation for Info Tech.

Explore other reviews about Infotech

5.0
Oct 22, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible company with progressive and innovative practices

Cons

No major cons worth mentioning

2.0
May 29, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Manageable day-to-day workloads and a generally low-stress pace - A good fit if you value stability over growth or earnings — particularly early-career, between roles, or nearing retirement - Previously siloed teams are starting to shift toward genuine cross-functional collaboration — a meaningful, if overdue, improvement - New PE ownership is beginning to modernize the org, which may open up future opportunities

Cons

- Compensation sits well below market, and it appears to be by design. The company benchmarks pay against a peer set that pointedly excludes the firms it actually competes with for talent — and declined to discuss its methodology when asked. Offers tend to land well under comparable companies (in some cases roughly a third lower, and steeper before negotiation), the bonus is small and discretionary, and the 401(k) match lags peers. The consistent pattern is anchor low, resist, and correct only partway under pressure. Expect a $5k or less increase after negotiating. - PTO is discretionary in name only. In practice there's real cultural pressure not to take it — requests are treated as an inconvenience and made into a bigger deal than they should be — so the "low-stress" upside doesn't fully translate into time you can actually use. - Advancement skews toward tenure and existing exec relationships over performance. Promotions are slow (2+ years at the earliest) and the career ladders are murky, so there's no clear path to close the pay gap once you're in. - Little urgency or drive to innovate relative to higher-growth environments. - Prior reorgs exposed both newcomers and some of the longest-tenured employees. The cross-functional direction should support healthier long-term growth, but the recent shake-ups have left some original employees on edge and less open to newcomers. - Ambitious people seeking acceleration or high-performance expectations are likely to find it frustrating.

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