Compensation below industry standard. Pay is low relative to the workload, and merit increases are minimal even for top performers, typically not reflective of the additional responsibilities agents take on.
Increasing workload without proportional compensation. Since 2024, the company has adopted a "lean and mean" approach, requiring agents to handle multiple products and expanded responsibilities for the same pay.
Frequent management turnover. Leadership changes happen often, and these shifts tend to impact front-line employees the most, with policies and expectations changing regularly.
Profitability doesn't translate to employee compensation. Despite the debt settlement industry being highly profitable (multi-billion dollar sector), financial success hasn't resulted in meaningful pay improvements for ground-level staff.
Career development is improving but still challenging for front-line agents. The company is making efforts to create clearer career paths, which is appreciated, but the current approach still falls short. Agents are expected to learn and develop largely on their own time while managing back-to-back calls in a high-stress contact center environment. In contrast, supervisors and managers receive structured classroom training and dedicated development time. While the intent to improve is there, the execution leaves front-line staff at a disadvantage.
Emotionally challenging client base. Debt settlement is a divisive product with significant drawbacks for consumers. Clients are often in financial hardship, frustrated, and dissatisfied with the program itself. Additionally, consumers are more educated than ever about debt settlement services, including the risks and controversies surrounding the industry. This means you'll frequently encounter skeptical, informed clients who may question the program's value or express distrust. This creates a consistently difficult customer service environment where managing expectations and de-escalating conflict are daily requirements. Do your research on the debt settlement industry before applying. Understanding the product, its limitations, and common consumer criticisms is critical to managing stress and setting realistic expectations for the role.
Heavy reliance on AI without addressing workload concerns. Leadership appears to misunderstand the limitations of AI tools (LLMs). While AI can assist with certain tasks, it's being used as justification to increase agent workload rather than improve efficiency or reduce stress. The tools don't compensate for high call volume or the complexity of distressed customer interactions, and this approach risks significant burnout.