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A company that consistently tries to do the right thing, but - Anonymous employee Realogy Employee Review

3.0
Apr 8, 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some of the most knowledgeable and passionate people you will ever get the opportunity to meet work at Realogy. I thoroughly respected and enjoyed working with all of my immediate teams and direct managers. I recommend working at Realogy for a chance to explore the nuances of real estate, which is an incredibly exciting and dynamic industry filled with unique brands and personalities as well as many adjacent verticals. Realogy fully embraced remote work following the pandemic and does an above-average job at being cognizant and respectful of peoples' work/life balance. I loved working with our direct clients and it was a thrill to meet many of them in person each year. I enjoyed helping them solve marketing problems by sharing simple practices that they could take back to their offices to improve their lead gen and recruiting efforts.

Cons

Realogy listens really well when they perform problem validation with customers, but encounters difficulty navigating solution design and product development. As a result they often launch "stuff" that is dissonant to customer expectations. I became increasingly frustrated by the sheer amount of "stuff" thrown out into the market that customers simply didn't want, need, or understand how to use. It cost our business unit time and money to promote the "stuff" which distracted from being able to improve our franchise marketing offerings. Very difficult career progression for sub-director positions that is heavily dependent on meaningful exposure and earning corporate social reputation. These types of opportunities are less frequently available to managers, specialists and coordinators.

Explore other reviews about Realogy

5.0
Feb 8, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Offers great work life balance

Cons

There is a lack of career mobility

1
1.0
May 21, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Freedom in the field and working with a great diverse group of real estate agents and their managers. Fellow field staff were also amazing.

Cons

Working in this role was honestly exhausting, frustrating enraging. I had to have anywhere from half an hour to an hour by myself, just to come down from the day before interacting with my wife and child. The way management operated made it really hard to feel valued or even respected. If you clocked in two minutes late, you’d get written up and slapped with a warning—no grace, no questions asked. I was put on five PIP's in the matter of 6 months! Every time you got called into the main office, you just knew it wasn’t good news. And when they suddenly asked me to start supporting office work—something I’d never done before—it was even more uncomfortable and confusing. Because I knew nothing of the main office infrastructure, I looked inept and incapable of performing my job as if I were a new IT support specialist! The biggest issue, though, was the lack of support from leadership. I never felt like my manager had my back. While I understand people face mental health challenges—and I respect that—my manager’s behavior was wildly inconsistent. I later found out it was due to switching medications for bipolar disorder, but after a full year of constant ups and downs, things never got better. Eventually, I had to walk away for my own sanity, suddenly resigning. I lost two good work friends because of my actions too, but it was worth it in my opinion. Micromanagement was out of control. They tracked everything: when you clocked in, went to lunch, clocked out. They even tracked your computer habits too! There was zero trust. They’d send you out of your region last minute, sometimes on a Friday, and expect you to fight rush hour traffic from places like Saint Charles—knowing it’d take two plus hours to get home. It felt like no one cared how that impacted us. And don’t even get me started on travel pay. You had to drive 22.5 miles before you could even start claiming mileage, and then it was only $0.50 a mile. You had to play games with Google Maps to find the longest possible route just to try and get compensated fairly. It felt ridiculous. To top it off, the pay was terrible—about $10,000 less per year than what others were making in similar roles. For the amount of work, the stress, and the lack of support, it just wasn’t worth it. I stuck it out as long as I could, but in the end, I had to move on. Thankfully I was able to image my computer and delete all my data.

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