AT&T reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(42,016 total reviews)
avatar

John Stankey

43% approve of CEO

45% positive business outlook

AT&T has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 42,016 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The AT&T employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Telecomunicaciones industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

42K reviews
1.0
Oct 2, 2014

Slave drivers

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay, pension, benefits and some minor union protection.

Cons

As a tech, you are responsible for a range of things 100% out of your control. If you are given refurbished equipment that fails, you are at fault. If you go to someone's home and they are not there, you are at fault. If customer service sells the wrong product, you are at fault. Att manages it's technicians through harsh, heavy, and frequent discipline. Suspensions are guaranteed. You will work weekends and Thanksgiving, Christmas, and birthdays and in the past year I have yet to work less than 9 hours in a day. Doing the job is easy, following the daily changes in processes is impossible. You are set up to fail then punished for not meeting the companies numbers. Doing the work and pleasing the customer comes after meeting the companies numbers. I've been successful from high school to college to every job I've ever worked at but there is no being successful at ATT. This may sound like a disgruntled employee but in the field of technicians, morale is zero across the board. Very few technicians will make it 3 years before getting fired or quitting. My wife is the equivalent of a single mother. I work through dinner time and t-ball games, school functions and birthday parties. I miss the kids opening gifts on Christmas morning and my past two thanksgivings have been inside a customers home watching them with their families. I've been through 2 managers and 2 second level managers in 2 years. I've been transferred across town without my approval. I've worked in 4 different crews and they're all exactly the same. Discipline, discipline, discipline. My first write up was only 2 weeks after I started. I haven't met another employee who has any less than 2 write ups in the past 6 months. Examples As a tech, you take your work phone home. A tech had his car window smashed and his work phone was stolen. He gave management a police report and was suspended for 3 days. A loss of about $600 in pay. The company gives you x amount of time to perform a task. They will give you 20minutes to run a wire from the top of the pole to the home. They don't care if it's storming, if you have to climb 3 poles, or you're running it through trees. You get 20 minutes. If you can't do it in 20 minutes, you're put on an action plan. An action plan is a list of things you must further do to prove you're working as fast as you can. It may involve calling your manager when you start, when you end, and taking before and after pictures. He may also require you to run copper tests on that wire as well. However, you do not get more than 20 minutes to complete the action plan and thus will get suspended for not complying. If you can not complete a job for any reason, this will count against you. If the customer isn't home, if AT&T isn't available in their area, if they cancelled 4 days ago and load management still sent you, if you're dispatched out by customer service to remove a tree, fill a hole, cut comcast lines off the house, patch drywall, remove satellite dishes, or any other erroneous task that is not in our scope of work, it will count against you. If you install or repair services and lightning strikes or power surges kill the equipment, you obviously didn't do your job right because another tech has to go back to your job and fix it. You will get written up and/or suspended. Micromanagement is extreme. If someone is not home, AT&T process is to take a picture of yourself standing at their front door for proof. You call your manager for absolutely everything. If he doesn't answer or read the texts or emails, it's your fault for not staying in touch and you will be written up for whatever actions you choose without his approval. This means if you get to a house and someone isn't home, you must wait on your manager to call that customer even though you've called them. You are not given time for this process. The vehicle is tracked with an extensive GPS unit that automatically reports to your manager your position and speed. You are allowed to drive 2 miles for lunch. If there is no restaurant in 2 miles and you drive further, you are out of process and will get suspended. You can eat in your truck but are not allowed to idle your truck so you must sit in the heat. Process says if you do not complete a job, you only get 15 minutes credit. You drive 20 minutes to their home, knock and call for 10 minutes. AT&T says you MUST wait in their drive way for 15 minutes before you are able to return the job. Not counting the calls to your manager, you've now wasted 45 minutes that you get 15 minutes credit for and are now behind in your numbers because you've followed process and will be disciplined. If you leave earlier than this, you are out of compliance and will be disciplined. Absolutely horrible company with immoral ethics, stressful work environment, hostile management, and morbid business practices.

4.0
Jun 6, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Stable job, lots of vacation, plenty of perks, benefits great, and employee discount at 50% off of everything are phenomenal.

Cons

You'll find this in every review: too many things to focus on and the future outlook looks like its even more metrics with the addition of connected car and DTV merger. Every single year our paychecks get smaller and smaller.

avatar
AT&T Response
10y
Thank you for your feedback and acknowledging the pay and benefit we pride ourselves on. Goals help us stay competitive and to grow as individuals and as a company. But we try to balance the challenge of meeting sales goals by providing top notch pay and benefits. We appreciate you and everything you do and will ensure your feedback is heard!
2.0
May 22, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent pay for LCOL areas if you’re a developer, not decent if you are willing to move for tech.

Cons

Was fine before RTO initiative but they’ve performed a complete 180, forcing people to relocate to keep their jobs (Dallas). Going from being a company focused on productivity (did you get your tasks completed on time etc) to a company obsessed with you sitting in the right place 3-5 days a week and tracking. Many talented people let go because they didn’t live in the right place or weren’t scanning their badge an arbitrary number of times a day. Offices are bad, dirty, no assigned seating, people fight over seats, you get to the office no where to sit end up in a hallway. No real amenities at offices. Everyone still just meets on teams, people are just going in to get the badge swipe. Upward mobility is low, you’ll reach a certain level and get forgotten about unless you play politics hard to the point that the job becomes more about politics than the actual work. Hard work and going ‘above and beyond’ isn’t rewarded, constant budget cuts, constant layoffs. Management is clueless and somehow believes all of this chaos will create a better end product, or they don’t care and are just chasing short-term stock gains. Avoid, at least until Stankey is gone.

Viewing 178 - 180 of 42,016 Reviews

Glassdoor has 46,431 AT&T reviews submitted anonymously by AT&T employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if AT&T is right for you.