Prepare to have you labor exploited as long as you can bear - Anonymous employee MONEX Employee Review

1.0
Apr 29, 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Free food on some Fridays. People who work there are generally friendly.

Cons

Don't expect to make money quickly. Pay is EXTREMELY low for the industry. There is a steep learning curve to the industry and senior management is impatient with new salespeople to produce results very quickly with minimal resources and training. Success often depends on having manager that will go out of their way to help you out, which can be hard to find at Tempus. Salespeople in this company either burn out or cannot afford to continue working here long enough to see success of learning the industry. Good luck paying rent in DC or LA on 30k/year. Speaking of compensation, the senior management team is constantly trying to find ways to minimize the pay of employees. They have made many changes to commission structures over the years solely because they want to keep as much for the firm as possible without losing senior salespeople with large books to better paying jobs elsewhere. Senior management is a mess. The C Suite is filled with the worst kind of corporate decision by committee that often leads to no decision whatsoever. This has led to the loss of many talented professionals (both front and back office), frustrated with stagnation, indecision and hours of tractionless management meetings that were ill-moderated and worked toward no results. No corporate values to speak of. Even the CEO can't say the company's mission statement without reading it from a sheet. Oh, and all the positive reviews from August and Sept 2017 were "requested" from management. Don't bother if you can avoid it.

avatar
MONEX Response
7y
Tempus has grown and changed significantly in the last 12 months. We are growing our sales team, designing empowering training programs at multiple levels, and providing stronger senior management support for our team. We have launched employee engagement initiatives to ensure that our employees feel supported, appreciated and part of a cohesive and collaborative culture. We are a diverse international organization who is very excited about our growth strategy, and more inspired than ever to meet the exciting challenges of this industry.

Explore other reviews about MONEX

5.0
Jan 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great leadership, competitive pay, a team that supports you and sets you up to succeed

Cons

Healthcare Plan could be better but is still good

2.0
Mar 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company may be a reasonable fit for individuals in sales-oriented roles. Free lunch on Fridays

Cons

Where to begin. At the holiday party, senior leadership boasted about how well the company was performing. Less than two months later, downsizing began — with no forewarning to employees. That kind of disconnect between what leadership says publicly and what is actually happening behind the scenes is a serious red flag for any prospective employee. One pattern becomes clear quickly: the company is heavy on impressive-sounding titles but light on people who actually fit those roles. A handful of individuals are genuinely qualified; the rest appear to hold titles that don't reflect their actual depth of experience or capability. My direct manager was a prime example. He consistently stressed the importance of stakeholder engagement and pushed his direct reports to improve in that area — yet when stakeholders were being unreasonable or difficult, he was unwilling to step in or advocate on the team's behalf. He expected from others what he was not willing to model himself. That kind of hollow management creates an environment where employees are set up to fail while their manager avoids accountability entirely. Onboarding was brief, poorly structured, and lacked any real substance. There was no meaningful training for the role and no guidance on what a successful career path would look like. For those coming from more established or well-structured organizations, be warned: leadership is resistant to being challenged and certain conversations can become unnecessarily toxic. The culture here appears built around sales above all else — professional rigor, accountability, and open dialogue take a back seat. Benefits are among the worst I have encountered. Health insurance for two ran $300+ per pay period — a steep employee contribution by any standard. The 401(k) requires 30 days of employment before eligibility, and the employer match is only 5% on a 6% employee contribution, which is below market. Sick leave is not separate from PTO, meaning any illness eats directly into your vacation time. Compensation was also not competitive for the Washington, D.C. area. The in-office policy required five days per week for the first 90 days — framed in a way that felt more like a lack of trust than a genuine onboarding structure. When the reduction in force occurred, the manner in which it was handled was deeply unprofessional. My direct manager held a conversation lasting no more than a minute, abruptly ended the call, and simply wished me well — no context, no acknowledgment, no basic human decency. There was no severance offered and health insurance was terminated the same day as the layoff. For a company that had just celebrated its own success months earlier, the treatment of departing employees was strikingly cold and disrespectful.

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