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Falvey Insurance Group

Is this your company?

Awful - Unless you Love Nepotism - Anonymous employee Falvey Insurance Group Employee Review

1.0
3 Oct 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

No pros that I can think of.

Cons

This place is a horrible unless you are a relative or family friend. They treat their employees like peasants, and act like you are so lucky to work there. Environment is toxic, people are constantly checking other people and getting mad when individuals take vacation, sick days, need to leave early. Always understaffed and solution is to have the underlings work longer and harder, people constantly breaking under pressure. Most people on a fast track to nowhere, hardly any upward mobility. Some managers are purely malicious, there is a lot of workplace bullying and no one cares. Have seen a lot of crying.

Explore other reviews about Falvey Insurance Group

2.0
30 Oct 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

• The company initially presents as organized and professional, with efficient onboarding and welcoming communication. • The early environment appears collaborative, which can make new employees feel valued and optimistic about their role. • There is potential for meaningful work if leadership alignment and communication were consistent.

Cons

• The organization demonstrates classic signs of inconsistent leadership and reactive management. Despite positive performance feedback, employment can be terminated suddenly due to shifting internal priorities. This creates a psychologically unsafe environment — one where employees remain uncertain about their standing, no matter how well they perform. • Change and process improvement efforts are often met with quiet resistance. Employees who take initiative or streamline workflows may unintentionally threaten existing power structures, leading to subtle exclusion or removal rather than collaboration. • Leadership communication lacks transparency. Decisions appear to be made at higher levels with little to no context shared with direct contributors, creating a culture of speculation and mistrust. • The offboarding process reflects a lack of emotional intelligence and empathy — sending certified letters demanding equipment return shortly after a layoff demonstrates transactional, not relational, behavior. This approach signals that people are viewed more as assets than as human contributors.

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