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MAPFRE Insurance

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MAPFRE Insurance reviews

3.0

39% would recommend to a friend

(350 total reviews)
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Jaime Tamayo

44% approve of CEO

41% positive business outlook

MAPFRE Insurance has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 350 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The MAPFRE Insurance employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Seguros industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

350 reviews
3.0
Dec 10, 2023

Not a bad option

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

easy commute people here are nice to wrok with work-life balance

Cons

depends on which department you work in, you could be under extreme pressure and work really long time the compensation is lower than the market average

1.0
Nov 13, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Helping economically disadvantaged customers pay their premiums using payment agreements. Making lots of satisfied and relieved policy holders. Work-at-home environment. Teamwork via chat, and coworkers are nice. No meetings. MAPFRE has everything mostly on one web browser and a bunch of tabs, not like other workplaces that make you chase information across a web page and so many additional apps (like DOS-like consoles). Their information database is mostly on point. Most knowledge base stuff is easy to find. Customer support is a hard job and MAPFRE initially appears to do a great job setting up a system that alleviates this. Their training makes it look like a warm and supportive environment.

Cons

Sadly, the appearance of warmth and support vaporizes in short order. For starters the supervisor will routinely call you out in public in team chat on a mistake or a perceived mistake. Whether they're clueless about professionality or just like to humiliate workers is anyone's guess. In any case this is highly unprofessional. They will make up new rules on a whim. For instance first never hang up on a customer. This was the first and reasonable rule. Then it became "call them back if the call is disconnected". Then the rules became "if they hang up angry then call them back." That one isn't stated, but "implied", as one supervisor openly admitted. In this case they falsely accused me of hanging up on customers because I didn't call back when the call disconnected. Supervisors here love to hurl false accusations if they don't like you. This was only one example. Funnily enough, Genesys has the ability to record clicks, something I learned back at MA Health. Somehow they have this "turned off" at MAPFRE... which would have shown what they said is a lie. Examples like this are common there. One other thing: I've been a customer of various companies for 40 years and never been called back on a disconnect. Normally calls go round-Robin, meaning that the longest idle rep gets the next call. But if they really don't like you, they put you on first dibs mode. That means if you end a call, you always get the very next one that comes in, before anyone else gets a call. It's a great way to wear a rep out while others get a breather between calls during quiet times. If you have to go to the bathroom and a call catches you because Genesys flat out ignored you going off-queue... go in your pants, but never decline a call. That's their rule. If you as a customer want to talk to a supervisor? Good luck. The rep is required to charisma their way out of it because the supervisors will almost never talk to angry customers. Most importantly don't confide anything in one-on-one's. This is where you discover the high school mean student mindset that is their psychological undercurrent. Particularly, be careful what you say when you are asked what roles you'd like to sit in on/audit for. Don't mention a job that isn't customer-facing - even though your trainer will admit to you that everyone wants that job, requesting sit-ins with that role WILL be used against you later. Last but not least? Management sent me a present for my birthday. "Scythe Novel by Neal Shusterman". A creepy book about killers who keep the human population under control and whose main character becomes titled "Lucifer". This, as a mystery birthday present. So you can add 'psychotic' to the list of problems that plague MAPFRE's management. All of this, on top of the complaints others have expressed. I've found them all to be true when dealing with management.

Viewing 61 - 63 of 350 Reviews

Glassdoor has 414 MAPFRE Insurance reviews submitted anonymously by MAPFRE Insurance employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if MAPFRE Insurance is right for you.