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Customer Engineering Services Employee Job Reviews in the United States

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2.2
Average Rating
(based on 4 Customer Engineering Services Review Ratings)

Ratings by Category

Company Culture
1.5
Growth Opportunities
1.3
People You Work With
4.3
Person You Work For
2.3
Rewards You Receive
1.8
Support You Get
2.3
Way You Work
2.5
Work Setting
2.0
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Customer Engineering Services Employee

"Hello. I worked for Customer Engineering services for a number of years and I’m surprised to see the misinformation out there by their HR. They regularly meet with Indeed and Glassdoor to attempt to remove truthful feedback that they deem as negative. They don’t pay competitive salaries. They rarely give out raises or bonuses. They gave out a $1 raise last year because of PPP. Otherwise no one had seen a raise in 6 years. The atmosphere is extremely toxic due to unprofessional and unqualified managers they put in in place. Business has steadily been declining over the years. I was just laid off. I don’t mind because I’ve been looking for other employment for well over 2yrs. I wish the remaining staff the best but the writing is on the wall. Nobody prints photographs anymore, and that’s the only reason they’re still doing any business. I hope this helps future applicants. They have 1-2yrs before the doors will be closing."

Person You Work For 1 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 1 / 5
Support You Get 1 / 5 Rewards You Receive 1 / 5 Growth Opportunities 1 / 5
Company Culture 1 / 5 Way You Work 1 / 5
Customer Engineering Services Employee

"I have worked for CES for 3 years. We are a division of Fuji Film. We service all the photo equipment at Walmart's and Sam's locations along with medical equipment and a number of other services. We as CES have no brick and mortar sights. We are an ever evolving company to keep up with the constant technological change."

Person You Work For 4 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 3 / 5
Support You Get 3 / 5 Rewards You Receive 2 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2 / 5
Company Culture 3 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Customer Engineering Services Employee

"The worst company I have ever worked for. They are lacking management direction in a dying industry."

Person You Work For 2 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 1 / 5
Support You Get 2 / 5 Rewards You Receive 2 / 5 Growth Opportunities 1 / 5
Company Culture 1 / 5 Way You Work 1 / 5
Technical Service Representative

"Good for entry level, doesn't reward hard work"

What do you like about working at Customer Engineering Services?

"Scenery changes daily, all equipment needed to perform job is provided (including car.) Pay is good to start, but..."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Unless you're just starting out and looking to add experience to your resume I'd look elsewhere. Between tiny raises and lack of upward mobility this company offers little if you're currently employed, and if you have significant experience in field service you can do better."

What don't you like about working at Customer Engineering Services?

"...don't expect large and/or frequent wages. In 8 years I was lucky to get a 2-3% raise every 3 years, and normally only after bringing it to the attention of my manager several times.Management has completely unrealistic expectations and rarely express gratitude when you go out of your way. I once volunteered to travel outside of my state for a week to a city that was 9+ hours away, ended up working a 6 day, almost 70 hour week...and the only response I got from my manager was I worked too many hours, and my drive time to and from home was excessive. Likewise, they recently sent me 5+ hours away on moment's notice (literally found out about it at 7:30pm the night before), then informed me 4 hours into the drive that they wanted me to spend the rest of the week out of town - giving me no chance to pack an overnight bag or clothes. After working a 16 hour day (drive time, four service calls, then driving to a hotel near my next day's calls) my manager's only response was that leaving my home at 5 AM wasn't early enough and I could have squeezed another call in if I had left an hour or two earlier.There is zero upward mobility within the company. Upper management is all IBM alumnI and seem to always have someone waiting in the wings when a position opens up - to the point where positions outside of hourly are not even posted internally, and the only indication there was an opening is when an e-mail is sent out announcing that someone from outside the company has started as -whatever position-. In 8 years I saw *one* co-worker advance within the company, and even then it was a largely lateral move.An average work day consists of driving to and from retail and office sites and servicing a variety of equipment depending on the contract. Most customers you'd interact with are minimum/near minimum wage retail employees. The largest account they have is with a major photofinisher that has film in its name. Training is hit or miss, again depending on the account. By the time I left they had picked up a contract with a major office equipment supplier, and we were expected to BS our way through convincing customers that we were old hands at servicing their equipment when often it was the first time you laid eyes on the machine in question.Provides benefits but outside of dental or supplemental life insurance they're not really worth buying...I showed their health plan to an independent insurance agent whose response was its on the mediocre side of terrible. I was able to do far better buying my own policy. They just started 401k matching but the level of contribution is a joke unless you're contributing 30% of your income. No year-end bonuses or profit-sharing of any kind."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Offer your employees some incentive. Offering raises that barely keep pace with inflation doesn't inspire people to work hard or really care about the company."

Person You Work For 2 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 3 / 5
Support You Get 3 / 5 Rewards You Receive 2 / 5 Growth Opportunities 1 / 5
Company Culture 1 / 5 Way You Work 3 / 5

Customer Engineering Services Reviews FAQs

Is Customer Engineering Services a good company to work for?

Customer Engineering Services has an overall rating of 2.2 Average Rating out of 5, based on over 4 Customer Engineering Services Review Ratings left anonymously by Customer Engineering Services employees, which is 44% lower than the average rating for all companies on CareerBliss. 25% of employees would recommend working at Customer Engineering Services.

Does Customer Engineering Services pay their employees well?

Customer Engineering Services employees earn $47,500 annually on average, or $23 per hour, which is 28% lower than the national salary average of $66,000 per year. 3 Customer Engineering Services employees have shared their salaries on CareerBliss. Find Customer Engineering Services Salaries by Job Title.

How satisfied are employees working at Customer Engineering Services?

25% of employees would recommend working at Customer Engineering Services with the overall rating of 2.2 out of 5. Employees also rated Customer Engineering Services 1.5 out of 5 for Company Culture, 1.8 for Rewards You Receive, 1.3 for Growth Opportunities and 2.3 for support you get.

What is the highest paying job at Customer Engineering Services?

According to our data, the highest paying job at Customer Engineering Services is a Business Development Manager at $95,000 annually. Browse Customer Engineering Services Salaries by Job Profile.

What is the lowest paying job at Customer Engineering Services?

According to our data, the lowest paying job at Customer Engineering Services is a Installation Technician at $30,000 annually. Browse Customer Engineering Services Salaries by Job Profile.

What are the pros and cons of working at Customer Engineering Services?

According to reviews on CareerBliss, employees commonly rated the pros of working at Customer Engineering Services to be People You Work With, and cons to be Company Culture and Growth Opportunities.

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