Dead end job - Benefit Advisor WTW Employee Review

1.0
12 Aug 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

This is a lifeboat job--great for people desperate for work, or for semi-retired people, or people who only need to work six months out of the year and are happy to make a boatload of money for their employers while earning peanuts for themselves.

Cons

There is no incentive for advancement. No one outside of senior management, even those who are permanent employees, can make much more than $40,000 per year. I was released for two months after eighteen months of continuous employment so they could reset the clock and keep me as a temp to avoid having to pay benefits. All promotions within the company are lateral--supervisors make no more than rank-and-file benefit advisors. Training is inadequate, cronyism is rampant, and each year it gets worse. The business model that might have worked for this company six or eight years ago doesn't work now. More than half of the workforce for this season will be completely inexperienced and/or marginally qualified, which will put more strain on supervisors and cause more negative customer service issues. They will hire anyone with a pulse who can pass the insurance exam, without taking into account the essential qualities needed for a call center rep, most notably literacy and the ability to speak clearly and articulately, in a professional manner, and with courtesy and empathy.

Explore other reviews about WTW

5.0
15 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great people who excel in their field and enjoyable to work with; good benefits and compensation; good feedback systems

Cons

a little too much email from corporate staff

3.0
17 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Paycheck is great, people to work with are generally very intelligent, positive and professional. Many positions are work from home or at least hybrid. Continuous learning is encouraged. Since the company is technically British, it is very inclusive and has several networks to ensure inclusion (although some such as the menopause support group are UK based which isn't surprising as the US doesn't typically care about such things though they should).

Cons

The workload is often insane to put it mildly. You are expected to sort of "do everything". When you are encouraged to speak up if you have too much work, they pretty much tell you "well you just have to figure out how to get it done because we have to give you more work". There is blatant favoritism. Those who are liked are praised for giving detailed answers on calls and granted a month off of PTO while those not as well liked get grilled when they ask for one day off and are told "not to overthink" when they try to provide detailed answers.

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