Are these positive Thryv reviews fake? - Sales Representative Thryv Employee Review

1.0
Nov 6, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Prior to Dex/Thryv taking over the bloodied carcass of the former YP / AT&T Yellow Pages, there were several positives attributes: Pay, benefits, diverse product offerings, vacation time, etc. Back in the day, the Yellow Pages were Google before Google was Google. Print was a very powerful medium. Sadly it suffered a long, painful demise. Little know fact, AT&T was the very first company Google reached out to when they sought a reselling partner for their growing Adwords platform. We helped build their business into the colossus it is today. While it wasn't a perfect job, I am thankful for the lengthy career I had at YP prior to Thryv coming in and completely obliterating the place.

Cons

Once Thryv took over YP, it was an immediate toilet plunging. True story: During CEO Joe Walsh's first-ever speech to the YP sales team he warned everyone that 75% of the management team and 50% of the sales team were going to be let go in short order. He wasn't lying. Within weeks, entire cities of management personnel were discarded. And shortly thereafter, a constant beatdown of the sales force ensued with endless job threats and carnage along thew way. True story number two (and what ultimately convinced me to leave). Joe sent out a Holiday memo to the entire YP team. It went something like this..."Thank you for your services YP Team. You are critical to the success of our team and have outsold our existing employees by all measures. We hope you enjoy this special holiday time with your families. Oh, by the way, we still need to let 50% of you go. So, I recommend you get yourself in the top 50% or you will be fired before year's end! Happy Thanksgiving everyone." Though the words are slightly paraphrased, that is an absolutely true story. Who would want to work under those conditions? As for Thryv's software product, it's a poor man's CRM. I sold several clients this faulty product before I left the organization, and not one of them were properly fulfilled by the design team. I had to cancel every order I made because fulfillment was completely botched. What other cons were there at Thryv? Declining pay, low morale, lazy local management, high employee turnover, nazi-like senior management, etc., etc., etc. And finally, my headline, "Are some of these Glassdoor reviews are fake?" I have serious concerns about Thryv's inflated positive review numbers. In 2019, someone wrote a review stating they enjoyed a lengthy 10 year Graphic Design career with Thryv in Grand Rapids. I worked that market for over 20 years. There haven't been graphic artists on staff in that city since the early 2000's. When Thryv took over, everyone moved to home-based offices. There were NO graphic artists on staff with Thryv in Grands Rapids...ever. So I call BS on that positive review. My guesses that multiple of these reviews are similarly faked.

Explore other reviews about Thryv

5.0
Apr 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work from home, great team, fulfilling!

Cons

Ability to see co-workers in person

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Thryv Response
1mo
Thank you for the feedback and long‑term perspective. We appreciate the recognition of our remote work model and team environment, and continue to explore ways to foster connection and collaboration across a fully distributed workforce.
2.0
Apr 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working remote is good; rare nowadays. Accrued PTO, no “unlimited PTO” BS. Good tuition benefits. Good product-market offering (marketing/CRM for small businesses) even against stiff competition. Middle management is strong -- very friendly and helpful.

Cons

Below-market salary. Only 2 weeks of paid parental leave. Layoffs every quarter. Poor health insurance. Keap merger still struggling years later. Everyone is drinking the kool-aid on agents and vibe-coding, but they aren’t *really* building anything for our customers — the ones we’re supposed to be working for. Too many people talking too much and "winning the argument" through talking very quickly and a liberal use of buzzwords. No one is actually cooperating together to launch concrete products (actual value) for our users. Finally, HR lacks honesty and authenticity — it’s all just fake smiles and well-produced cult-like videos, even more so than a typical HR department.

4
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Thryv Response
1mo
Thank you for taking the time to share this feedback. We genuinely appreciate hearing from current employees — even when the message is hard to read. We're glad the flexibility of remote work, your benefits, and the strength of our product resonate with you. We also hear the frustration around compensation, benefits gaps, and the pace of change as we continue to evolve as a company. These are not small things, and we don't take them lightly. We know that navigating significant transformation — including how we're integrating AI into our work — creates real uncertainty. Our goal is to make sure that evolution is grounded in what actually delivers value to our customers, and we recognize we don't always get that balance right. We'd encourage you to share your perspective directly through your manager or any of our internal feedback channels. Every voice matters in shaping where we go from here.
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