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Fidelity Investments

Engaged Employer

Fidelity Investments reviews

4.1

80% would recommend to a friend

(18,304 total reviews)
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Abby Johnson

85% approve of CEO

78% positive business outlook

Fidelity Investments has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 18,304 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Fidelity Investments employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finanzen industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

18K reviews
1.0
Aug 11, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

~401k and profit sharing are excellent. ~Education reimbursement. Will pay 90% of CFP certification. ~Health benefits are good, but a bit expensive, and in order to reduce the expense quarterly, you must engage in an online "wellness" program. ~High volume business allows for lots of opportunities to hone in your investment and retirement planning skills.

Cons

We are hired for our past successes in planning, sales and relationship management, but then mircro managed and questioned for every single action beyond belief. It is hard to work here and maintain a sense of self respect and dignity! ~Phone calls are listened-in on by management, and then your conversation with an existing elderly client is called in to question, like, why did you waste 5 minutes talking to her, continuing to build that "relationship", and looking up the status of the TOA for her, when you simply could have forwarded her to the call center cust service team? Seriously? Every rep in my branch has suffered a similar type of encroachment. ~Management will occasionally either sit in to observe an appointment, or they will have you dial their extension and listen remotely from their office phone. It is an arbitrary and random decision as to which appointments they "join", but really, nothing shakes the confidence of a HNW prospect more than thinking the advisor they are here to see is undergoing some sort to management oversight!! It doesn't matter how well the manager justifies it to the prospect, they are thinking, "run"!! Every rep in my branch has suffered a failed appointment due to this hideous micro-management. ~Fidelity preaches the relationship model, putting the customer needs first, holistic financial planning, blah blah, then really only cares about what products you "sold" to each client. Management is very very short-sighted. An appt where you meet with a multi-million $ prospect preparing for retirement in a few months, building the relationship, developing trust, laying ground work for all future wealth planning, is not regarded as a successful appointment or very good use of your time, because it did not result in actual "business" today. ~Fidelity is bombarding their clients with a never-ending barrage of email, mail, just non-stop marketing, all on the S/AE behalf, which drives most clients absolutely nuts. ~They only care about whether or not you are completing the menial "tasks", like clicking all the appropriate buttons in siebel. You are tracked and watched and measured on every single little thing you can imagine. How many clicks you clicked. How many times you dialed out...And all your numbers that are tracked are not only to ensure you are being a busy little bee, but the manager is rated on how many little clicks and menial tasks his/her advisors are doing. It's really all about how to make the manager look good to his/her manager! ~Management at the branch level is extremely lame. They want to treat you like a child, and keep you fearful, knowing every little move is being tracked and watched. Like I said, it is hard to maintain a sense of dignity and self respect in an environment like this. Those who can brown nose management, and are otherwise spiteful, political and backstabbing (to fellow colleagues) do well here. Success is: just tell management what they want to hear, and slam clients into products to satisfy management... Those with little talent and integrity stay, endure, and ultimately get promoted, perpetuating the bad leadership. They stay, put up with the games, and endure because they realize they could not make it anywhere else (except, perhaps, on a used car lot). Those with talent, integrity and truly good planning skills leave for a saner environment. ~Clients in the S/AE book are very frustrated by the fact that every time they get assigned a new S/AE, and they happen to like that advisor and feel that they are working with someone with knowledge and integrity, that advisor ends up leaving. They keep getting turned over, until ultimately, they will end of in the book of one of the talentless, low-integrity bozos that never leave, or, they will just TOA out of Fido. ~Management, by their own admission, have never worked in our S/AE role as it is currently designed. The "relationship" model is relatively new, and as reps, they only served customers that were fed to them by the "green machine" on a transactional, not relationship, model. I think that disconnect helps explain the double standard; why they focus on tracking/forcing transactional business while falsely preaching relationship development. They like to talk about how successful "they" were in the role...but yeah, if all I had to do was take inbound calls and leads, roll the assets over and slap the client in PAS, funds, and/or FILI, then just move on to the next one with no follow up or relationship accountability...well, heck, any moron could do that.

1.0
Oct 29, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The only good thing that I can say about the company is that I got paid on time. They seem to know that any gaps in pay would probably push enough people over the breaking point that they'd quit immediately.

Cons

Working at fidelity was the single most dehumanizing and pathetic experience of my entire life. The military treated me less like a number. McDonald's treated me less like a number. I would rather be in prison because the guards there are trained to treat you with dignity, unlike fidelity managers. When I began working at Fidelity we were promised 3 days a month on site and the rest of the month WFH. 2 years later I quit because it was 2 weeks a month on site, with a goal of moving to fully on site within a year or two. Had they advertised that during the interview process I wouldn't have taken the job. If you have the misfortune of being hired in a phone role, know that you will have back to back calls for 8 hours a day. As soon as you hang up one call, you'll be talking to someone else within a millisecond of you pressing the button. Your managers will watch you like hawks and if you dare to take a 3 minute bathroom break, you will be called out for it. You're basically just there to be a punching bag for all of the people that the company has screwed over through miscommunication or lack of communication. Most of my day was spent dealing with frustrated customers who received incorrect information from other representatives and then being told my management that we either couldn't, or weren't willing to expedite any solutions to their problems. Promotions exist and the company hires internally, which sounds awesome until you realize it'll be 200 internal applicants for 3-5 positions when they do appear because everyone's so desperate to get off of the phones. Managers don't want to lose their best call center workers either because their bonus is tied to your stats. So if you're an overachiever, you're not going anywhere.

1.0
Jun 21, 2023

Something Is really wrong

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company has one of the best benefit packages on the market but the cons majorly outweigh the cons

Cons

The company has taken a massive step backwards with it WFH policy and have made it very clear that If you are not interested in engaging that you are putting your career at a major disadvantage e.g prior the the last all staff there were awards given and all award were for return to office engagement. Their profoundly out of touch with employees e.g will bang a drum about woman in technology but implament a backwards work from home policy which will impact woman in the workplace directly. They then try to lecture the employee about how to work in the office space without impacting others yet these are all problems that THE COMPANY created. This company WILL lie to you.

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Fidelity Investments Response
2y
Thank you for your feedback. We strive to create an employee experience that serves the employee and we would like the opportunity to learn more about the concerns you raised. We can be reached at 800-835-5099 Prompt 2, 4, then 1, if you are willing to share more details with us.
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