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Enterprise Mobility

Engaged Employer

Enterprise Mobility reviews

2.9

31% would recommend to a friend

(19,301 total reviews)
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Chrissy Taylor

90% approve of CEO

31% positive business outlook

Enterprise Mobility has an employee rating of 2.9 out of 5 stars, based on 19,301 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Enterprise Mobility employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Transporte y logística industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

19K reviews
2.0
Oct 20, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-All Daily Rental non-managers are ranked against each other on a regional sales matrix, so you have direct quantitative feedback on your performance. I was consistently in the top 10-15% of their rankings every month so I found this to be a huge pro, but others might not see it that way. -Top performers are recognized at ERAC functions, which are usually lunches or dinners with lots of alcohol. Plan on getting blasted and schmoozing with Level 3 employees, it's the only way you're gonna get ahead. -Coworkers can be cool. -They allow you to transfer to a different geographical region fairly easily, although in most cases a demotion and pay cut is necessary. -The initial training they give you is good. They also conduct follow up training sessions which are immensely helpful. No company that I've worked for since has matched ERAC's ability to train. -It looks good on a resume. -The health insurance is actually pretty good, even though United HealthCare is a terrible company. -Great discounts on rentals when you need them. A family trip to Puerto Rico over New Years required an SUV when the going rate was $1,300 for the week, I got it for under $300, insurance included.

Cons

-It's a customer service job so difficult customers are inevitable, but I really wish ERAC had been more straightforward about the abuse they expect you to take, and I do mean abuse. When a customer called me a homophobic slur after I filed a claim for damage to the rental vehicle, managers at the regional corporate office, who sit in nice comfy offices and never deal with customers, forced me to call the customer and apologize to HIM. -You are ranked heavily on customer service in an extremely illogical way. ERAC measures this by sending out random phones surveys to approximately 7% of your customers, asking them to rate service on a 1 to 5 scale. Anything other than a 5 is treated the same as a 1. So if a customer chain smokes in a car and you charge them to get it detailed, or if they damage a car and you hold them responsible (both situations are following ERAC policy to a T), you can imagine how that service call is going to go. -ERAC's business model is to take reservations no matter what regardless of inventory. So if you have no cars on your lot and 6 people sitting in your lobby waiting on cars, customers calling your branch/the 800 number will be rerouted to a remote call center, where employees will tell customers that you absolutely have a full size car ready to go in 5 minutes. Again, a policy created by those who never have to actually deal with customers. -No work/life balance, expect to work at least 48-50 hours a week when you're first starting out. As a manager, expect to work no less than 55 hours a week. Since they are pushing more and more branches to be 7 day operations, this is only going to get worse. -Pay is unfair when you first start. If you live somewhere with a high cost of living (DC, NYC, Boston, California, etc.) you'll be scrounging to make ends meet. -Speaking of pay, when you become a manager your base pay actually goes down and you start making a percentage of the branch's profits. So if a customer buys the CDW, (rental car insurance), which ERAC encourages employees to shove down customer's throats, and then the car is totaled, it comes out of YOUR paycheck as a manager. -Career progression above the Branch Manager level is very difficult. 6 years, 6 figures is a lie. I know Branch Managers that have been with the company for 7+ years and can't take the step to Level 3 (Area Manager & above), because positions just don't open up that often. The people in senior management positions (regional rental managers, city managers, and anyone with a VP title) have been with the company a very long time, back when ERAC was still only operating in a handful of states and growing rapidly. The company's growth rate, at least in the daily rental arena, has slowed dramatically, so the same opportunities that existed 15+ years ago just don't exist today. -When you get hired they advertise lots of different career paths you can take other than Daily Rental, like Loss Control, Talent Acquisition/Recruiting, HR, Car Sales, and a bunch of others. Two problems exist here: one, if you go to one of these other departments it will take 10+ years to hit six figures, since working your way up to a Level 3 position outside of Daily Rental will take at least this long. Car Sales might be the ONE exception since the bulk of your pay is commission but only if you are a beast at selling used cars. Most who go to Car Sales end up quitting, and almost of the managers in Car Sales come from different departments; they didn't work their way up to that position. Two, those positions almost never come available. In my almost 3 years with ERAC I never saw a position available in HR, Loss Control, or Talent Acqusition. -IF you are lucky enough to work your way up to a corporate position at main campus (I saw ONE manager do this in my entire time there), that means relocating to St. Louis. Hey, at least the cost of living there is dirt cheap. -Almost impossible to find another job while you're working there since you're working 7-6, Monday-Friday. ERAC HR also search regularly on sites like Monster, CareerBuilder, etc. not only for potential candidates, but current employees as well. Expect to be called in to the regional office if they find you on here for a stern talk. -I really didn't care for the fratboy culture. Some people might love that, though.

5.0
Sep 17, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I applied on line. Received an invitation to take an assessment which was fairly easy, you just have to make sure once you start you complete it. Received an email congratulating me for being successful on the assessment. I was scheduled for 2 phone interviews and then a 3rd one in French. Interviews were fair, just make sure you have the experience required for the job, if you do the questions are not difficult. Their whole hiring process was handled professionally. I was offered a bilingual French position, full time with benefits. Starting pay $14.38 plus opportunities for bonus based on performance, not a bad starting pay for working from home!

Cons

Shifts are locked in for a year. Will be working from 2:30pm-11:30pm with Wednesdays & Thursdays off. Have to work weekends.

2.0
Apr 19, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great Progression opportunities. Can get promoted to high positions fairly quickly with a clear progression path. Driving nice cars can be a plus. Range rovers, Mercedes c class, bmw 5 series etc.

Cons

No work life balance. Overtime is not voluntary but mandatory. Generally will easily do 12 hour days and 60 hour weeks. The pay isn’t great considering the hours you work. Expected to work alternate weekends and if your unlucky enough to get a seven day branch you will be in on sundays too! You will be exhausted and have no time to do anything other than work and go home. Sales culture is toxic. No commission but pushed to achieve ever increasing sales targets. If a customer has their own hire car insurance, you will still be pushed to sell them enterprises ‘insurance’ as well. Why would a customer buy insurance twice. Some sales techniques are unethical, for example lying to customers about their excess on the car. Sometimes forced to drive and rent to customers unsafe vehicles with bald tyres / no break pads or not disinfected/ cleaned from the last customer ( a Covid no no). Can spend long hours driving vehicles. Doing deliveries or going long distance to pick up cars. Some days you can be driving all day. Very exhausting when you’re working minimum 7.30am to 6pm. Very stressful environment.

Viewing 34 - 36 of 19,301 Reviews

Glassdoor has 33,991 Enterprise Mobility reviews submitted anonymously by Enterprise Mobility employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Enterprise Mobility is right for you.