Retirement area is broken - Retirement Wholesaler AXA Employee Review

2.0
Jul 8, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great Benefits, good people for the most part, they try hard to stay current.

Cons

They are not willing to pay revenue share fees to the broker dealers therefore, you really do not have carte blanche when calling on advisors. It is like cold calling advisors and most of them have been burned by the 401(k) product and the service model in the past making a stressful job more stressful. The internal desk management is old fashion and inexperienced at selling the product. The external wholesalers are made up of a bunch of former Paychex wholesalers. Some of them have top-tier experience. Most of the externals have been with the company less than2 years, most have been hired this year. This team has turned over numerous times in the last 4 years, no continuity what-so-ever. There is no relationship management nor key account team for 401(k). The biggest selling agreements they have signed in the last few years are Primerica, Farmers Insurance and Allstate. These advisors do not know how to sell plans so as a wholesaler you are mandated to do everything for these advisors. Management promises the world and expects the wholesalers to deliver. Not a place to make money as an external or internal wholesaler. They really have no respect for the internals and this is an experienced team. Hardly any room for growth the jobs go to outsiders and people who are willing to yes management to death.

Explore other reviews about AXA

5.0
Apr 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pension fund is better then expec

Cons

It is a stressful job with a lot of costumer

3.0
Jan 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Strong work–life balance: Working hours are generally reasonable, and personal time is respected. Stable and reputable company: AXA is a well-established global organization with long-term stability. Clear processes and governance: Well-defined procedures help reduce ambiguity and manage risk effectively. Global exposure: Opportunity to work with international teams and align with global standards. Professional working environment: Emphasis on compliance, ethics, and accountability. Learning opportunities: Access to training, documentation, and structured knowledge resources. Predictable workload: Less firefighting compared to fast-paced startups.

Cons

Slow decision-making: Multiple approval layers can delay execution and innovation. Limited flexibility in processes: Strong governance may feel restrictive for employees who prefer autonomy. Compensation growth can be gradual: Salary increases and promotions may be slower compared to startups or tech firms. Change management can be conservative: Adopting new tools or approaches often takes time. Bureaucracy: Documentation and compliance requirements can feel heavy at times. Innovation pace varies by team: Some teams move faster than others depending on leadership and region.

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