Dishonest, Deluded, Disintegrating - Production Wipac Employee Review

1.0
Apr 25, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Small pockets of hardworking, professional people throughout the business at supervisory and below levels. Challenging technical diversity.

Cons

Where to begin? 1. Management lie not only to themselves and their staff, but also to external auditors and customers - this I’ve witnessed first hand 2. Current leadership/senior & mid management failings that I’ve seen personally include; sexist and racist remarks and gestures, compulsive lying, bullying and harassment, incompetent attempts at constructive dismissal (not me, a colleague who had done nothing wrong), promotions based on who’s ‘in’ rather than competence, complete disconnect with operational level of business. These are just a few examples - think of nearly anything that is considered unprofessional conduct, and this lot have it covered. Managers who aren’t bright enough to not use permanent markers on whiteboards (and can’t even spell), managers who boast about how many people they’ve sacked or made redundant, managers who refer to women as objects…. The list is not exhaustive! Wipac COULD be a great place to work and a successful and strong business built on hard work and innovation, but first, the lies and BS need to stop. Customers and auditors WILL find out eventually, and like all lies, the repercussions will only get worse the longer it is carried on for.

Explore other reviews about Wipac

3.0
May 15, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great customers, great work life balance

Cons

No employee engagement, no critical feedback for growth

1.0
May 19, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Exciting projects, technology and customers.

Cons

I spent a few months at Wipac and, unfortunately, my experience was not what I expected. I didn’t receive a formal induction until my second month, and even then, I had to push for it myself after raising the concern. Basic Health & Safety and fire procedures were never shown to me until a fire drill happened, where I had to follow everyone else without any prior briefing. There seemed to be confusion between HR and my department about who was responsible for my onboarding, resulting in neither taking ownership. Industry-specific acronyms and terms were not explained, so I had to create my own checklist just to keep up. The recurring excuse I heard was, "We’re only a small business"—however, I have worked for genuinely small businesses that operated much more effectively and professionally. There was no documented orientation or structured training plan provided. On top of this, all Teams calls were done in the middle of an open-plan office, making it difficult to concentrate or communicate properly. Nobody turned their camera on in these meetings either, which—combined with the lack of onboarding—meant I had no idea who anyone was, making it harder to build relationships or integrate into the team. I am an autonomous person with plenty of grit, so the fact that I left after just a few months really says a lot. The turning point was when I had an onboarding session with a colleague, and when I asked how long they had been there (expecting they were new like me), they told me they had been there seven months. That’s when I realised the situation wasn’t going to improve any time soon. Wipac has potential, but without proper onboarding, structured processes, and a commitment to continuous improvement, new starters are left to fend for themselves.

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