If you believe sleep is optional, burnout builds character, and fear is a reasonable management tool, this could be the opportunity you’ve been waiting for.
Churn n burn is the business model. 90% of new hires are gone within a year. They love hiring straight out of college -- easier to mold, easier to pressure, slower to realize how toxic things are until the Stockholm Syndrome fades and they discover they don’t actually have to live “the Paycom Way.”
Work-life balance does not exist. Expect 60+ hour weeks as a baseline. You will take work home. I regularly worked until 10pm and was back in the office by 7:30am the next morning, in a full suit, every day.
President’s Club means nothing. You can crush one fiscal year, but if you don’t close something in month one of the next -- PIP. Fired. And public humiliation!
Boundaries are optional :) mostly for leadership. Fraternizing with direct reports is common and casually tolerated. Mandatory in-person trainings double as dating pools for managers. Multiple HR cases have involved leaders making advances or giving “special opportunities” to reps. Consequences being maaaaybe a relocation. Maybe a demotion. Definitely still employed.
Micromanagement meets 1950s Miss America pageant! Employees are expected to dress, speak, and present themselves however the company chooses. Onboarding for the women includes a powerpoint with instructions on hair, makeup, acceptable suit colors, and mandatory closed-toe heels. Company-wide. Meanwhile, managers have advised female reps to send “special videos” to male prospects to secure meetings. Yes, that was an actual recommendation. From multiple leaders. Both male and female.
Weekends aren’t yours. Expect unpaid weekend work and mandatory trainings, and flying out to OKC to take in the beautiful sites of the Omni hotel basement all day, every day.
Confidentiality is also aspirational. Personal information shared in confidence has a tendency to travel quickly, which discourages vulnerability and reinforces your cortisol spiking not only for your metrics, but for your personal sanity.
The compensation looks attractive upfront. Just understand what you’re signing up for: high pressure, high exposure, no margin for error, and a culture that rewards running yourself into the ground for a brass animal trophy (yes, this is what you can expect to receive as a reward instead of a bonus check).
If that energizes you, you’ll thrive.
If not, there are other ways to make good money without sacrificing your integrity.