Proceed with Extreme Caution – Micro-Management and Unrealistic Expectations - Account Executive T-Mobile Employee Review

2.0
Mar 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The best part of the role is the colleagues. Many of the people working here are talented, supportive, and doing their best in a very difficult environment. The employee cellular discount is also a nice perk. Health benefits are still decent for a single person, though coverage seems to have declined compared to prior years.

Cons

Based on my experience in the Micro-SMB Account Executive role, this is one of the most heavily micromanaged sales environments I have worked in. Expect multiple internal meetings every day (often 4–5+), constant activity tracking, and weekly forecasts that carry significant pressure if the numbers are not met. Even when issues outside of the sales rep’s control occur (such as order systems not functioning properly), the expectation is still that the deal gets closed without much operational support. Quotas can feel extremely aggressive given the market realities. Much of the role involves attempting to move customers away from well-established competitors like Verizon, AT&T, and Xfinity, many of whom are already satisfied with their existing providers. There is limited greenfield opportunity. Travel expectations can also be demanding. The role involves a lot of time driving between businesses and being in the field, while still being expected to attend internal meetings during the day. This can make the workday very long. Following the December 2025 layoffs, many employees were moved into Micro-SMB roles that operate more like high-volume B2C sales than traditional account management. When concerns were raised, the messaging communicated to employees was essentially that they should be grateful to remain employed. Performance management can escalate quickly, and employees may find themselves placed on performance plans with limited time to recover. As a result, turnover appears to be very high and morale is low. Compensation structure also requires patience. The 401(k) match does not begin until after one year, and equity takes a year before vesting begins and then vests over several years. Many employees do not remain long enough to see those benefits. Door-to-door outreach and field sales can actually be enjoyable, but the pressure, heavy monitoring, and constant internal demands make it difficult to focus on building meaningful client relationships.

Explore other reviews about T-Mobile

5.0
Dec 17, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits, flexibility, compensation. Teamwork and good management.

Cons

There were really no cons working there.

5.0
Mar 22, 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Training and "green days" to work on training courses online, team activities for teambuilding, excellent benefits including up to a 10% yearly bonus (merit-based), tuition reimbursement, extra insurance options besides health insurance (pet insurance, free life insurance up to 1.5x yearly salary), stock purchase options and yearly stock award to each employee. One of my favorite benefits is job swaps - so long as your manager clears it, you can swap jobs with an employee from another related department for up to a couple months to gain insight and experience into what the other department does from day to day. I left my last company as it had become a bad environment, and after joining with T-Mobile I realized it was one of the best decisions I've ever made. There are very few days where I wake up not wanting to go to work, and I learn something new every day. When I come across a process I'm not familiar with, my teammates are more than happy to provide on-the-spot training, or schedule a time that works for both of us to do so. Above all, the managers set you up to succeed rather than to fail - they want you to do well, and do everything in their power to make sure you have the tools to do well.

Cons

There's some of the same political bs that any company has, but my team has two excellent managers that make work enjoyable. There are a couple personality issues within the team, as happens with any job, but overall everyone gets along. As far as training goes, there wasn't a whole ton initially (though I believe it's more due to the nature of the job - it's impossible to condense everything into a couple week training course).

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T-Mobile Response
9y
Thanks so much for taking the time to write this -- we love hearing how much you love coming to work! Your words were spot on when you said your team wants you to "do well". That's exactly what we want for all of our team members! The nature of our business is constantly changing and we know how important it is to provide good benefits and equip you with the training and development you need to be successful. We're glad you're taking full advantage of all of it. As we continue to grow and evolve, so will our training and tools. If you ever feel like you're not getting enough of what you need, though, talk it over with your manager and they'll help you get back on track. Thanks again for your feedback and your dedication to T-Mobile. -- T-Mobile Careers Team
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