ADP reviews

3.7

71% would recommend to a friend

(22,286 total reviews)
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Maria Black

81% approve of CEO

70% positive business outlook

ADP has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 22,286 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ADP employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

22K reviews
1.0
Oct 17, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Almost zero oversight or training from managers. Freedom to go home at 11 am and do nothing if you desire. Great job for getting paid while you look for a new one that isn't a complete nightmare. They pay for your mileage up to $300ish per month and reimburse you for your cell phone. The San Diego office has a lot of booze fueled events to mask the fact they completely lied to you when they hired you. Also, they fly you out for a week of "training" in New Jersey and stick you in a hotel room with a stranger. If your idea of a good time is going to New Jersey, this gig is for you.

Cons

***READ THIS BEFORE ACCEPTING Inside/outside/associate district manager sales roles **** note: post was removed for mentioning specific titles. The instances mentioned in this review extended to the highest level of local management. This will get buried or sandwiched between 5 star reviews from managers who make their people write reviews to win a $12 bottle of fireball). If you want to confirm what I am saying here... look at the tops of the desks/cabinets when you walk in the office for an interview and look at all the bottles of strewn about the office. Where to start.... the recruitment process was incredibly unprofessional, but probably the least terrible part of my time at ADP. The recruiters should have been a tip off the whole company was a complete farce. They were always juggling me around multiple people and nobody was communicating with one another. Every time I responded to one, I would get an out of office that they were on vacation and would have to connect with someone else and start all over again. Once hired, I was told I would be given a short internship to make sure I was a good fit (the sales apprentice role). The *leaders* slyly told me it would only be a few days and would only pay $12/hr. To their credit they did only have me doing this terrible role for a few days. They brought me in and offered me the permanent role, with a start date of NEXT MONTH! So for an entire month, they paid me $0.50 above minimum wage to work there with zero benefits. I should have left at this point but I was determined to make this work. I honestly don't know who was luckier, me or the other interns who were kept in this role for months before being told they weren't going to hire them. In reality multiple managers told me they knew they weren't going to hire the people months before firing them out of the apprentice role. This was simply a way to get their top people free calls to generate business they didn't have to work for. If you find yourself in the "apprentice" role for more than a week and making dials for an "elite" performer.... leave. You will not be getting a job offer from them and are basically cheap labor. Next came the new hire training, which everyone had said was "world class sales training." At one time this may have been true. These days it was only for one hour per day, 3 days per week, over an eight week period! Why this was an acceptable practice is completely beyond me. The whole thing could have been accomplished in a week. They covered nothing important and taught zero skills relevant to the job. During my training I was told by my direct manager to just sign their name on all the role plays I was given as homework to do with them and to copy the answers from people who had done it previously. Again... should have taken this as a bad sign but I was determined to make this work. At this point, I was able to start seeing the cracks in the paint. It was all smoke and mirrors. Nobody was making money except for a few people who had been handed the top referring CPA firms in the county by their managers. This was strategically done to make the managers look successful. ***Fun Fact: These firms only refer over to ADP because ADP will pay these CPAs up to 12x as much as they will their sales people for those accounts.*** Bottom line…nobody was making any money as an associate district manager. When I was interviewed for this position they told me I would easily be making $70k by the end of my first year, six figures at least in year two. In order to make that $70k, I would have to be selling at least $150,000 worth of payroll. To put that in perspective, it would put me roughly in the top 5% of all producers in that role worldwide. To make matters worse, they won't actually give you your territory (opportunity) until after you already are hired. At this point you will usually find out that you are restricted to walking around some disgusting gang infested neighborhood that nobody else wanted or has had any success in. In addition to all of this, the other lines of business are constantly stepping all over the same tiny accounts (inside sales, time & labor, workers comp, TotalSource, Resource, workforcenow & more). Nobody is playing by the same rules. During my time in the San Diego office I witnessed outright lies to customers and employees alike, cheating, sexism, intimidation of subordinates, bullying, hazing, favoritism and a bevy of other wildly inappropriate behavior I never thought possible from a Fortune 250 company. I was actively coached and encouraged to engage in these behaviors and was ostracized when I expressed my concerns to management. Unfortunately, my experience was not an isolated issue and has been reported to the corporate headquarters in New Jersey and individuals in the HR department by multiple people. To my knowledge, nothing has ever come from any of the complaints. Take my advice, between the intimidation of employees by the management, outright lies about the position and overall opportunity... you can do better. Do NOT take this job, especially in the San Diego market.

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ADP Response
8y
Hello and thank you for providing your insight into your experience working for ADP. ADP values creating and maintaining a workplace where employees are paid fairly and work in a professional environment. We are sorry to hear about your unsatisfactory experience and would welcome the opportunity to discuss this further. You can contact us at HR.Associate.Relations@ADP.com
5.0
Jan 8, 2021

A great place to work

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

ADP cares about its employees. Throughout the COVID Crisis, they have done everything possible to retain employees, provide mental health support to those who are struggling, and even provided all associates additional financial bonuses to help them through this difficult time. I have been here for almost two years and it is truly one of the best corporations I’ve worked for. They offer a generous 401k match, focus on work life balance, and foster a diverse working environment.

Cons

Sometimes things can take a while to implement new ideas/strategies, but the time lag to get things done is on par with most major corporations

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ADP Response
5y
Thank you for taking the time to write a thoughtful review! We appreciate hearing about your personal experience and value the positive feedback you have shared about ADP's care for our associates. We look forward to many more years with us.
5.0
Jul 11, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great company, believes in family first. People are awesome. Management getting better

Cons

Outsourcing of jobs within ADP lowers the quality of our product. Language barrier with outsourcing is crazy. ADP doesn't need to save money by outsourcing. Keep tenured people.

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ADP Response
10y
Great insight. We appreciate your open and honest review and will take you suggestions about outsourcing and the changing global landscape seriously. Thank you again.
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