Predatory Contracting Company - Administrative Assistant VersaTech Employee Review

1.0
Mar 7, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Unfortunately there are no Pros for this company

Cons

This particular contracting company will say whatever they need to say to get you to sign the contract and work for them. Once you do, everything they have promised is out the window. While working for them, I have learned to keep track of all the conversations, phone calls, and particularly emails as being the best for my record. its LACK of transparency, integrity professionalism, and honesty has left me completely frustrated and has pushed me to my breaking point to quit. It also has a significant high turn over rate. I will NOT recommend this for anyone. Before joining this company, please do your research. I will suggest finding another contracting company.

Explore other reviews about VersaTech

5.0
Oct 3, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong Senior Leadership, Focus on Customer Satisfaction, Always Looking To Expand the Business, Fosters Employee Engagement

Cons

Limited Pay Scale Due to Contract Work

2.0
Dec 31, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Colleagues are generally knowledgeable, professional, and enjoyable to work with. Senior and executive leadership are approachable and treat employees respectfully. Human Resources is responsive and timely. Compensation is fair

Cons

The compensation structure does not adequately support long-term employees; in several cases, new hires are paid more than experienced staff. Limited opportunities for career advancement and internal growth. Some managers identify as leaders but do not consistently lead by example. It’s unprofessional for managers to talk behind a technician’s back in front of other techs rather than addressing the issue privately first. Innovative ideas that could support future contract growth are often dismissed prematurely. Communication is heavily constrained by a rigid leadership ladder (employee → manager → senior manager → leadership → CEO), which limits transparency and diminishes the quality of ideas as they move upward.

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