You're never good enough no matter how hard you try. Over worked and underpaid. - Anonymous employee Kforce Employee Review

1.0
Apr 4, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If I could delete this section, I would... with no hesitation. Some of the people they hired became my best friends (and still are to this day) and are amazing people, so why couldn't they be this way themselves? Obviously none of my friends even lasted a year at this hell hole. You should be able to tell there is nothing good about this place when all most all the reviews say "I would not recommend this place to a friend".

Cons

Not only was my entire time at Kforce San Francisco a con, but it gave me anxiety for months after. I still cannot go into a meeting with my boss (at a new job at an amazing company) without trembling with fear of getting in trouble or fired. I was not alone in this feeling either; I used to walk into the bathroom to find girls crying from stress on a daily basis. I cried every single Sunday and most days on my walk to work because I dreaded it so much. Even though the workday technically started at 8AM, people would get written up if they were not in the office before 8AM. We also could not leave at night until our boss left. He constantly implemented the dumbest rules, such as we had to bring our laptops home every night in case he needed us to work (but everyone just hid them in their desk drawers). He never even brought his home and left it out on his desk! He would increase peoples numbers and they would stay late in order to reach them, and then he would write them up for staying late and say their numbers were not enough. Everyone always felt like the two managers on my team (one was a male and one was a female) counted every single minute you were away from your desk, even if you were just going to the bathroom. Every time you left your desk you had to let them know where you were going. We had an internal chat system but got scolded for using it. Both the managers on my team made rules like no personal calls from your desk, no working out during lunch breaks, not talking about your personal life at your desk, yet they would do these very things at their desk right in front of your face (and they would write you up for doing it)! When we confronted them about this, they said it did not matter if they did this because they were managers. Clearly they do not understand how good managers lead by example. Our male manager would tell women on our team that they always had to wear heels and dress up a lot, but the other teams in the office were not forced to do this, ever. He would pull you into a meeting and write you up if he did not like the way you dressed (and think of how awkward that conversation is… a man telling a woman how to dress). This happened to many women on my team. The collective thought about the managers is they were unintelligent, greasy used car salesman who only cared about making money for themselves and not about you at all. I think the worst part about the managers was that they talked about us to our teammates behind our backs and thought we would never tell anyone. Well, we were all super good friends so we obviously told each other. We had one girl on the team who was a huge snitch and who was great friends with the managers (no one else liked her) and she would throw everyone under the bus for any and everything they did. We even confronted the managers and called HR about this, but it did no good. It really made everyone feel so bad about themselves, their work and their efforts. I am not aware of a single person that made it over a year at this place because it was such a horrific environment. They sell the company on the work-hard play-hard mentality and preach on team bonding activities. Well- they would never let anyone order more than one drink at happy hours, and if you wanted food- you could not get a drink. Our team events were always potluck- so you had to spend your own money. We hardly ever did anything as a team though, thank god. I met a girl the other day, who just started on my old team, and was told she was the first sales woman on the team, when in reality there were eight when I was there (she seriously would not believe me though). That is how they sell you the dream- they make you believe you are the first of your kind and that you will make tons of money- it is all a lie and that is why the turnover is ridiculously high. For a while, we had about one person quitting every single week. The friends I made there still enjoy getting together today and sharing all the bad gossip we hear (if that doesn’t say something, I don’t know what does) and I am pretty sure one of the managers got demoted and no longer manages people… but that took WAY too many people calling HR, WAY too many confident young professionals getting absolutely obliterated and WAY too much time. I don’t know what else I can say to convince you not to work at Kforce so I hope you listen to everything I just said! But I could go on for hours… even days…. it is sad how they take lovely confident young people and just destroy their entire self worth.

Explore other reviews about Kforce

5.0
Jun 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work Life Balance, the comradery across the whole firm.

Cons

I wish I could travel for work more.

2.0
Jun 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Decent salary base, probably could be a really good paying job if the job market was better

Cons

Definitely a typical, corporate sales culture where you are defined by your metrics and your metrics only. They are money grabbers, and their commission structure isn't that great. After 2 years you lose 50% of your commission from contractors and they eliminated early release days before holidays. My office started becoming a "bro culture" and the leader was clearly trying to act like "one of the guys" with the males in the office. If your market is slow with reqs, they expect you to reach out to other offices for subs which is hard to do when other offices favor their own teams' recruiters. They'll likely give you a picked over req or one not close to the money that their own team didn't want to work on. I had to reach out to other offices daily to basically beg for a req to work on to hit my metrics. To add to it, the PTO structure for salaried employees is not how they described it when I joined. 17 PTO days total (including sick/personal time btw) and it is actually accrued throughout the year. I had to use PTO for sick time and a vacation, so when I left I had to write them a check for my balance! Talk about a way to really give someone the boot when they're on their way out the door.

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