DISH reviews

2.7

31% would recommend to a friend

(7,810 total reviews)
avatar

Charlie Ergen

22% approve of CEO

25% positive business outlook

DISH has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 7,810 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The DISH employee rating is 24% below average for employers within the Telecomunicaciones industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

8K reviews
2.0
Sep 22, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Do you have a technical background or interest, but no degree? Great! DISH will do well by you. Even if you don't, they'll still take you, as long as you show a modicum of ability to multitask and use a computer. Offers great pay for the area for relatively unskilled work. DISH provides training, 4 weeks or so, to get you up to speed. Continuous training after that will keep you apprised of new equipment, new promotions, and just about everything you should need to do your job. . Loyalty is shown in monetary form. In 5 years, it's possible to go from $9-11/hr to more than double that. You do also get profit sharing, once a year as a 401K account, that the company will also provide a small match for if you put money in every paycheck. You can get sales commissions, a recent development that can certainly bolster your paycheck - if you meet 100% or better of all of your performance metrics. The money, combined with the benefits, makes it easy to create a life around the career of working at DISH. If you like gadgets, you'll get to learn about some of the newest, and maybe even get to take them home. If you like TV, you get it for free. The best thing about working at DISH is all of people you will meet & interact with. The people you work with become like a family to you. You find that you have the opportunity to become single-serving friends with people around the country in places you've never even heard of. Work is rarely boring.

Cons

Work at DISH becomes your life. During training, you learn a dizzying array of technical terms, business rules and procedures that you use every day, and you think about even when not working. These rules change at any given moment - but training is often thin and skims over important details that will unavoidably come into play during work later. It's hard to summon energy to have a life after talking to a mix of angry people, constantly changing job goals, and management that makes sure you're aware that you can be replaced in an instant. The company expects 100% of your focus, and 100% of your time. If you don't mind that, you'll do great - and it may well be to your benefit (see above about sales & performance incentives). However, the metrics you are scored on are often arbitrary, and either beyond your control or are subjective, and often both. If these scores are not exactly what the company wants them to be or better, it could cost you thousands in bonus & incentive pay. These metrics are also a constantly moving target, by the way, and will undoubtedly change the moment you accustom yourself to work with them. If the company wants you there more than your scheduled hours, it will often demand mandatory extra time. This is great if you need more pay, but less so if you want to actually accomplish anything with your time off. Being a phone agent, the company keeps time available between calls to an absolute minimum. DISH does not want you to be able to take a spare breath between incoming phone calls, as it would be wasting money - if there's a gleam of space between calls, the company will tell you you can leave - for an hour, or half hour maybe - unpaid. As an hourly phone agent, unless you take them during your scheduled breaks, you are expected to punch out if you need to visit the lavatory. Salaried or off phone hourly agents are not held to this expectation. Medical benefits are offered, but are often missing crucial parts. For a job where the primary function is mental, it is incredible that mental health coverage is not offered in anyway. Furthermore, there is no support available for you if you do want to talk with someone about the stresses you feel doing your everyday work. This can be exceedingly difficult when your job consists of speaking to angry & frustrated people all day. Technical Support agents should not be held to sales goals. The company has sales agents just for that purpose. Customers appreciate being educated about their service, but not sales driven for an extra buck. The company encourages bending the moral & business guidelines to meet your goals, but will punish you if you're actually caught breaking them. Advancement opportunities are abundant, and the corporate HR structure promises a transparent, fair and equal application & interview process. Yet this never happens - local management will lose your paperwork, or they'll interview you, score you on the interview, but still deny you or approve you based on how much they "like" you. Managers in the call center tend to hold grudges.

1.0
Sep 22, 2012

Truly the worst company in America

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I honestly can't think of any. Unless you have been happily enslaved, incarcerated or have battered wife syndrome there is absolutely no reason on earth you should work at this unethical, morally bankrupt company. It will destroy you from the inside out. You are better off on welfare or living in a cardboard box.

Cons

The complaints about mandatory overtime, working on holidays, etc are not as simple as they sound. This is a company that takes as much as they can from their employees and gives as little as possible back. I have worked plenty of jobs where I was required to stay late, work more than 80 hours in a week, work holidays or couldn't call in sick or late or wouldn't call in sick or late and I didn't mind that. But what Dish does, is they look for every opportunity to reach in to your paycheck and take what you've already earned and keep it from you. If you are early every day for a year and leave late, they will still "write you up" for being ONE MINUTE LATE even if you got in a car accident and had to take your infant to the ER for internal bleeding. They DO NOT CARE. If you take short breaks every single day and return early from lunch but are 2 minutes late from break one day, your manager will scream at you in front of everyone that you are getting "written up" for this infraction. You must ask permission to go to the bathroom. You are penalized for sales you do not make in the form of lost wages, despite the fact that you COULD NOT sell those prospects due to company policies such as the prospect did not pass a credit check or did not have a credit card. These penalties occur by Dish taking away from commissions you have already earned. Team meetings consist of managers instructing associates on how to play the numbers, how not to take calls, how to delay calls that they can't sell in order to preserve their "close rate". This company has nothing to do with "pride, adventure, winning or intelligence". NOTHING. They lie, steal and cheat at every turn not only from their customers but worse, from their employees. There is not one single employee at this location who is happy with their job, happy with themselves or proud to be with Dish. I have never said a single negative word about any previous employer because I don't believe in burning bridges in a professional environment but no person deserves to be treated the way Dish treats their employees. No one should ever consider working here. Do not work here. It is not worth it. There is a REASON it is a constant revolving door of employee turnover, why they are the most hated company in the entire US (not by a stable staff, keep in mind, but a constant changing staff who hates them) and you would be better off moving, selling your house, working part-time, ANYTHING other than this. Everyone here is looking for a way out. Do NOT believe what Dish says about themselves. I made that mistake and I regret it horribly. What we, as employees, know about working here, is absolutely true. You will be used, abused, taken advantage of, humiliated, disrespected and expected to believe that because you are being paid from time to time that this is all acceptable. No amount of money (and I've made plenty here) is worth the way I've been treated or the way I've been expected to treat customers at this company. Run, don't walk.

2.0
Sep 21, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you work in a high performing office like I do, you get less grief. The pay is respectable and the company is solvent. We are paid on time every pay period. 401k plan is good. The company is making investments to make additional streams of income. Great new innovation with the Hopper/Joey series receivers!

Cons

Culture from the top down is centered around self preservation. 90% of employees fear they could be talent upgraded or promoted to customer at some point. I listen to my superiors speaking poorly about the front line employees regularly. Grown men & women that carry the dish logo into the customers' homes daily. Sure not all technicians are world class, but it's easy to put these guys down when you have never done an install in your life or worked on a holiday (or you can't remember when you did) The industry is dying. So far the additional income streams are single sales, instead of repeat or reoccurring sales which will help sustain the company for years. The company has a great idea of keeping tv rates down by negotiating with the networks. This results in channel take downs that half the time don't ever return. I remember a day when Dish carried the full compliment of ESPN and Disney HD channels. There is no surprise we are not catching up to DirecTV. Our core prices may be less but what the customer gets is also less programming. Is working Christmas necessary? Seriously, is there enough profit made on that day that counteracts the morale killing. 9 out of 10 customers will say "I can't believe they make you work on Christmas" after they've made the appointment.

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Glassdoor has 8,266 DISH reviews submitted anonymously by DISH employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if DISH is right for you.