Caution - Senior Payroll Specialist Paychex Employee Review

1.0
Oct 25, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You learn more about the world of payroll.

Cons

I have been employed at Paychex for a year and a half, and I would like to provide a comprehensive assessment of my experience during this tenure. It is with sincere intent that I offer a constructive evaluation of my time here, which spans over two decades of professional experience. To initiate this review, it is important to acknowledge that the job description provided by the company does not offer a wholly accurate representation of the responsibilities entailed in the role. During my interview process, I was informed that I would manage a specific set of clients and predominantly engage in payroll-related tasks. Regrettably, this information proved to be misaligned with the reality of the position. Furthermore, the departure of the seasoned manager who hired me was a significant turning point, which, in hindsight, signaled a need for reevaluation. The work environment at Paychex appeared to be marked by a lack of organization, and the workload assigned to the payroll specialists exceeded reasonable expectations. It was apparent that the responsibilities extended to encompass the roles of multiple professionals, a situation that was compounded by the requirement to manage a phone queue. This resulted in a role that resembled a call center more than a payroll services company dedicated to providing specialized support to clients. Each specialist was assigned a minimum of 150 clients, with the expectation of delivering exceptional customer service. However, the constant engagement with the phone queue left little room for the fulfillment of these client-focused duties. Specialists were consistently fielding calls ranging from online troubleshooting to assisting employees with password issues, retrieving W2 tax information from several years back, addressing concerns from former clients, and managing accounts that remained charged despite the cessation of services. It is noteworthy that the demands placed on payroll specialists left little time for meaningful work, with the daily schedule often consumed by call handling and distracting training sessions that detracted from productivity. Moreover, the need to monitor multiple software programs, such as work and client email queues, task managers, and additional systems, added further complexity to the role. One of the notable challenges I encountered during my time at Paychex was the tendency to shift responsibility onto agents, creating an environment of gaslighting. It is essential to emphasize that the issue lies not with the dedication of the agents but with the organizational structure that places unreasonable demands on them while providing insufficient support. While there were opportunities for learning and professional growth, the challenges associated with this role far outweighed the benefits. The company's high turnover rate, exemplified by the departure of numerous colleagues who joined me at the outset, underscores the difficulties inherent in this work environment. In conclusion, I strongly advise against seeking employment at Paychex. The demands placed on payroll specialists are unsustainable, resulting in an unmanageable workload that compromises the quality of service. This review is intended to provide an accurate portrayal of my experience at the company and offer insights into the challenges faced by employees. For clients engaging with Paychex, please understand that the agents' limitations in providing quality service stem from an overburdened work environment, and not from a lack of willingness to assist.

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5.0
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Leadership connections, tailored growth pathways, and self-guided development

Cons

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1.0
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Pros

Lots of apps and gadgets are nice...when they work, but many of them don't work and tech support can't figure that out.

Cons

Micro-management to the Nth degree; meetings all day; training part of every day; and you'll still get manager calls to ask what you are going to do, what you've done, and what you will do, every single day, and how you're going to get 8 hours of sales calls into your day after wasting 5 hours on managers check-ins and meetings. Expectations are that you'll work long days, evenings and weekends either regularly or on a moments notice--you will have NO personal life. Rookie sales tactics, shotgun scatter tactics, and insanely high prospect call requirements will make a majority of your territory clients hate your guts (Denver manager wants 500 customer contacts per week! And I only had 215 prospects accounts). Many of my clients pleaded and begged me to leave them alone because me and the past 4 reps (in only 2 years) have been phoning, emailing and texting constantly. Some of them were former clients who dropped us for bad service, so there is no need to call but you'll have to. Some of them previously and respectfully let us do a demo, make a pitch, and give a quote, but then chose our competitor, and yet the Denver boss would insist that I call them twice a week indefinitely...just in case. The commission contract is 27 pages long and excludes everything under the sun. They will even take paid commissions back from you if the install team messes up and the customer cancels the contract. And then if you can stomach all that misery, you will likely make 1/3 of what they tell you to expect to make. NOBODY makes what they tell you is the ANNUAL AVERAGE except for 2 to 5 reps who get lucky with big deals and then never repeat that again, so it isn't an average for anyone, not even the top 1% of hundreds of sales reps. In a nutshell, this is big corporate misery and lies and privacy invasion like you have NEVER seen before. Try it at your own risk, and suffer.

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