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      WEX

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      How are career development opportunities at WEX?

      WEX reviews

      Overall lack of support across the organization.

      Client services
      Former employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      The coworkers across my direct teams were fantastic; driven, customer focused, and always willing to provide feedback to improve processes. The ERGs were also a great resource when you needed to unplug from the day to day and feel like you were a part of a community. The organization needs to invest more in DEI, they currently are a global company with basically one person available for DEI initiatives. Shout out to Samira Burris for all she does for this organization.

      Cons

      The quick recap: Lack of support, no growth opportunities, lack of communication between corporate headquarters and other lines of business, lack of communication with managers to direct reports, dissipating morale, poor work-life balance, lack of benefits that are legitimately helpful, no way to communicate or escalate concerns to anyone, poor compensation structure The recruiters do a hard sell on bringing talent in as individual contributors versus salary, with a lot of exaggerated promises about bonuses, which continued to become impossible to obtain and were not close to the totals the recruiter promised. Their promises on ease of development or transferring to new roles were also not fulfilled. For example, I was told I was overqualified for my role but that once I reached my six months I would be eligible for a change and my direct supervisor would support that. When I went to apply internally I was told I could not apply without my supervisor's permission and when I asked her about it, I was informed she does not know anything about that process and there was no training for managers on how to develop or transfer employees outside of their departments. I went ahead and applied after our discussion. It took a total of three months and interviews with 13 different people before I ever heard back about the role and even then I had to follow up with one of the TA managers directly because they have no formal follow up process. With no feedback other than "we are in a hiring freeze" I joined the mentorship program. The first few months they could not find a match for me. When I finally did schedule my first meetings with my mentor, my direct supervisor made a big deal about saying I didn't need a mentor because it was taking away from my time I could be working on our case load. I was so uncomfortable trying to navigate my relationship with her in 1x1's about the subject that I eventually stopped scheduling frequent meetings with my mentor. Then the mass layoffs started in 2022. A large portion of managers and other CS team members were removed. We were already understaffed from the pandemic and drowning in work and had been in a hiring freeze. Now, we were all expected to cross train, have higher workload goals, and were told it would not merit an increase in pay or a title change. They offered absolutely nothing as a holiday bonus and our team's merit increases were only 1%-3%. Managers cut all team meetings back in length, stopped 1x1s, and basically the teams fell into chaos with no one checking in on everyone in a meaningful way, so there were relations issues and no control over the department at all. Morale spiraled out of control for the next year. When team members reported to their direct supervisors that the workload was too high and they had no support from their team members who were essentially cheating the system to improve their reportable KPI's, everyone was told their attitude was the issue and "maybe this isn't the job for you". Meanwhile, the company is reporting record breaking profits across LinkedIn and in the press, while their staff is picking up secondary jobs to support their families because they state their market analysis did not justify a wage increase. For a snapshot, the CEO makes more a month than my entire team does combined annually. Then their yearly recognition program is announced they can afford to take 100(mostly salary) employees on an international retreat for a week. No doubt these folks probably are exceptional at their jobs, but they also can afford to vacation on their current salary and aren't suffering from the increased workload or crushing recession. They also do great work but are not recognized for it. If you reached out to HR for support, they would forward your personal email to them to your supervisor instead of assisting with your concerns, which besides being a huge violation of privacy was just another kick to morale. WEX pushes on social media that they are big on culture, but they never delivered on half of their promises they promote and they do not provide a meaningful way to give feedback to anyone who can make a difference. Another example, they launched a inspire and celebrate rewards platform where you can give shout outs to team members who provide excellent training, team work, or customer service and you get points to spend. We had less than a year of this program before our department auto-denied all pointing and you'd end up with just enough points to never be able to spend them because you can't accumulate anymore. You get a "virtual" high five. Your employees want recognition for all their hard work and that should be reflected in their access to obtainable bonuses, programs that do what they promise, or in their paycheck. A virtual high five is not meaningful, it is more of a broken system where your team members feel disposable.

      24

      Going downhill from one of the best places to work for to the worst

      Anonymous employee
      Current employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      This company no longer has any pros to list here.

      Cons

      There is constant restructuring and reshuffling across all levels of management. Within the tech teams, promotions and career advancement opportunities are largely dominated by a "good old boys club." New management roles are often created specifically for certain software engineers, who are predominantly white and male. At the same time, QA Engineer positions are being significantly reduced. Many skilled and dedicated QA engineers are either denied meaningful growth opportunities or offered only limited ones, while some of the least capable software engineers are quickly promoted without question.

      8

      Frequent "restructuring" and constant context switching

      Senior backend engineer
      Former employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Moderate work/life balance, interesting challenges

      Cons

      Organizational instability, managers lack the technical knowledge of roles they oversee, high expectation with little recognition, frequent ceremony without any actual productivity, leadership responsibilities are often assigned with no additional compensation or promotion, consistent pattern of laying off experienced technical staff while increasing contractor head count, scopes of responsibility way larger than industry standards or what they say in interviews

      8

      incredible experience

      Client growth
      Current employee
      Charlotte, NC
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Working at WEX has been an incredible experience. The company fosters a supportive and collaborative environment, with a strong focus on innovation and professional growth. Leadership is transparent and genuinely invested in employee success. The work-life balance, opportunities for advancement, and a culture of teamwork make WEX an outstanding place to build a career. Highly recommend!

      Cons

      I haven't encountered any cons during my time here.

      Low Pay - Low morale - Outsourcing work

      Cobra quality and readiness analyst
      Current employee
      Moorhead, MN
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      - Flexible with time off - Bonuses based on revenue - Employer contribution to HSA - DEI friendly

      Cons

      - Raises do not keep up with inflation - Frequent layoffs - Outsourcing work overseas - Spends more on acquisitions instead of employee retention - Utilizes Inspire & Celebrate program but does not allow monetary celebrations - Donuts and Pizza budget should be reallocated to employee pay - Advertises a role at $20/hr - $27/hr. And with 4 years of experience on the team, and an extensive background making a person overqualified for the role, offering $21/hr - No salary negotiations. You get what you get. - With multiple rounds of layoffs, career growth is almost impossible

      10

      Great place to work

      Client relationship manager
      Former employee
      Schaumburg, IL
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Great place to work, no room for career growth but overall great place to work!

      Cons

      No room for career growth

      Enough is Enough

      Anonymous
      Current employee
      Portland, ME
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Amazing, smart, and hardworking co-workers.

      Cons

      I have a good idea why you'd be reading this one-star review as an employee. We have been clear to middle management all the way up to C-suite executives that this is not working for us. What have we received for a response besides low-quality corporate doublespeak? There is no career growth within the company for a vast majority of high-performing and loyal employees. This was addressed with anecdotes of 'Wexers' of years-past who have climbed the ranks. This is not the current climate, and is no longer feasible. Take a look at the job board. Do you want the $18-20 hourly wage job, or do you want to take a shot at the position requiring 8+ years of Machine Learning experience? Let's say you love working in your position, and you are one of the best on your team. Sure, you may be able to stay in that role until its made redundant by some glorified chatbot. Your wages will not keep up with inflation. You will be in the same pay pool as someone who was just hired, and will leave the company before they learn the fundamentals of the role. It's okay though. Wex has done market research and is paying a fair wage when you take the benefits into consideration. It is your fault you can not afford rent and food. Maybe its a 'you' problem. Maybe you are going crazy. They must be paying what you really are worth, right? WELL HOT DOG! We are expanding in the metropolises. San Francisco, New York, Dallas, WASHINGTON FLIPPING DC!? Wow. I can't believe it. Now we can operate like a dot com giant right before the bubble popped. Sourcing big city talent with their pleated trousers and pants-suits. About time we do things the right way and get the layabouts back to the office while we are at it. JUST KIDDING! Its not a return-to-office initiative. We are just conveniently nearly exclusively hiring within 30 miles of our company espresso machines. It is just that you can only properly collaborate if you can smell your coworkers morning coffee breath. Meaningful coworker bonds and collaboration can not be accomplished remotely. Who has ever heard of an "online community?" You are not alone. The time for "being professional about it" is over. Hiding behind the optics of holding the high-ground does not work when you are throwing your valued employees into the meat grinder for shareholder value. We WANT this business to succeed. We WANT what is best for the company. We know that creating a bleak, soulless working environment is not the way to do it. You are losing your best and most loyal.

      16

      Going downhill from one of the best places to work for to the worst

      Anonymous employee
      Current employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      This company no longer has any pros to list here.

      Cons

      There is constant restructuring and reshuffling across all levels of management. Within the tech teams, promotions and career advancement opportunities are largely dominated by a "good old boys club." New management roles are often created specifically for certain software engineers, who are predominantly white and male. At the same time, QA Engineer positions are being significantly reduced. Many skilled and dedicated QA engineers are either denied meaningful growth opportunities or offered only limited ones, while some of the least capable software engineers are quickly promoted without question.

      8

      Great collaboration and interesting work environment

      Software engineer
      Former employee
      London, England
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Easy to work with individual, a-lot of collaboration between team members interesting work.

      Cons

      Nothing bad to say, maybe better growth opportunities

      WEX Operations Analyst

      Operations analyst
      Current employee
      Fargo, ND
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Work from home and work-life balance.

      Cons

      Minimal career growth opportunities so it is hard to grow within the company.