Pros
Easy, mindless job for someone who doesn't have anything else going on.
Cons
uring the interview, they painted a picture of a job focused on helping customers with their lost, stolen, or damaged devices. That was only half the truth. What they conveniently left out until we were too deep into training to back out was the real meat of the job: pushing an additional protection plan on customers, with our performance (and jobs) on the line if we didn’t hit our sales targets. The decent hourly pay and the lure of working from home are just smoke and mirrors. They mask the reality that this job is less about service and more about sales. Every positive customer interaction took a nosedive the moment I had to pivot to selling the AT&T Hometech Protection plan. It felt like betraying the trust I’d worked to build, turning relief into resentment. Management was all over us about boosting our sales game but barely whispered a word of praise for actually solving customer problems. It was clear: sales trumped service at every turn, making the job feel more like a sleazy sales gig than the customer support role I signed up for. The sales pressure was relentless. We had to badger customers with this protection plan spiel, needing to attempt to sell it not once but multiple times, even when it was clear it served no real purpose to them. The whole setup was pushy to the point of being unethical, especially when you knew the fine print of what you were peddling. To add insult to injury, the work hours were a nightmare. Stuck with a 12 PM to 9 PM shift, any semblance of a personal life was out the window. Forget about prior commitments or a work-life balance; those were fantasies. Despite promises that they’d work with us on scheduling, trying to get any flexibility was like pulling teeth. The bottom line? This job was a far cry from what was promised. It was a relentless sales grind disguised as customer service, complete with misleading protection plans and a work schedule from hell. The company’s priorities are all out of whack, valuing sales over genuine customer support and employee well-being. If you value your sanity and ethics, stay away. This isn't just a job; it's a soul-sucking trap.