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Post University

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Post University Reviews

2.9

47% would recommend to a friend

(357 total reviews)

John Hopkins

52% approve of CEO

47% positive business outlook

Post University has an employee rating of 2.9 out of 5 stars, based on 357 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Post University employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Education industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

357 reviews
1.0
20 Mar 2023

Steer Clear!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work, helpful IT department, overtime.

Cons

Volume of work, long and intense onboarding.

2.0
17 May 2022

Poor Quality Overall

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you are lucky enough to work under some of the few lovable Assistant Directors here than it is easier to enjoy the overall experience. You can also create your own schedule for the most part, aside for when they REQUIRE weekend logins and guilt trip for overtime hours or very late nights/early morning logins. Good benefits overall, but I’m guessing they use that as a way to compensate for the low pay which we will get to shortly.

Cons

No raises, even if you take on 10 new responsibilities and titles there’s virtually no way to even ask for a raise as everyone basically makes the same base pay for the position titles regardless of time in the role/responsibilities/trainings. Poor pay, and they love talking about how profitable the university has been which is so lovely to hear when our salary leaves many of us struggling. It is ALL numbers based, do not let anything fool you. Whether it be call volume, the amount of time you spend every day waiting for calls to come in, the amount of FAFSAs you’ve received from leads, the amount of students you’ve enrolled. There’s also no exam that qualifies or disqualifies the students that we’re meant to approve and enroll in class for a fully online degree program. You will find many of the students are computer illiterate and advisors are made to guide them through learning how to navigate on a computer as well. It’s a sales job in all of its entirety that’s progressively gotten worse over the time I’ve worked here. They will actually send us messages throughout the day that state to “not leave until you’ve gotten at least one FAFSA for the day”. I’m concerned as to how they feel comfortable hitting send on messages like that when so many of us are already feeling burnt-out and morally/ethically off kilter for being pressured to enroll people who are not going to thrive in the program. Then they stress about retention as if they didn’t encourage all of us to enroll as many people as we could with nothing but overall poor lead quality. A good majority of people cannot stay in this role very long due to the abuse of being on the auto dialer, multitasking ALL throughout the day, management sending messages all day, which all leads to quantity over quality. You may see some recent responses from Post University about how we should bring these issues up during “Town Halls” or speak to HR etc. We haven’t seen our CEO in a town hall meeting pretty much since he said to “expect raises in the Fall” and that was last summer. Being able to open the floor to the CEO was replaced with a drop box to “Ask John Hopkins” on our internal website. (Shocking) It’s all a fallacy.

1.0
9 Jan 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-The position is work from home. -After 3 months you're offered PTO, and at 6 months they will cover 90% of your tuition. Keep in mind a "tenured" advisor is someone who has been there for more than 1 year.

Cons

I want to start by saying I have felt this since I started at Post. I had high hopes coming into this position. This is an honest review of my experience at Post University. Student culture: -This school prays on low-income individuals who are either unemployed, formerly incarcerated, on disability, or homeless. It is their target demographic. The students we enroll in the fully online degree program are very often computer illiterate or don't own a laptop, but we are encouraged to enroll them anyway. -We are encouraged to communicate with students throughout the enrolling period, only to fully cut communication with them at the start week because "if students don't know what they should be doing by now then you weren't communicating properly." We leave students high and dry the day they are supposed to start class for "compliance" reasons. Employee culture: I have worked remote jobs in the past, but this was by far the worst company I have ever been employed by. -The pay was the lowest I have been paid in any admissions role. $40,000 a year for an unreasonably high workload. -You are NOT respected by your higher-ups. In team meetings, you are encouraged to communicate with your leads and told that we should ask questions. But in private chats with leads, you are made to feel guilty or incompetent for asking questions and told you should go find the answer yourself. -The metric expectation is unreasonable. You typically function on an auto-dialer, but when you're not auto-dialing the "rejected leads" call campaign you are required to make manual calls. You are not allowed to go more than 5 minutes without making a manual dial. If you do, you will be met with an angry message from your team leads who are watching your ready times constantly. -You get a 30-minute lunch and two 15-minute breaks a day. There were a couple of times that I went over my break by 1 minute, only to be met with berating teams messages from my team lead asking why I was late coming back from break. Yes, you read that right. 1 minute. -You aren't trained properly. During our training class, the trainers said "Well that's all for today, do independent research" and left to our own devices for the last 2 hours of the day. -I was hired on false expectations. You are required to work one late day and one weekend day a week. During my interview process, I told them it wouldn't be a good fit because that schedule wouldn't work for me. My recruiter said "Oh no problem! We can make an exception for you." When I was onboarded I was told I was required to work the weekend and late day, and that exceptions were not made for anyone. Systems: The systems you work with don't function. -You are expected to call, text, email, follow up with enrolling students, and be responsive on teams, all while keeping a 60% ready time. They require you to multitask while on the phone on a system that moves incredibly slow or crashes altogether. The amount of times my entire system shut down while I was 45 minutes into a phone call with a student is uncountable. -I spent the majority of my time waiting for my CRM, phone system, or teams to load. It is impossible to keep high ready times when it takes 10 minutes for your system to load, or it crashes altogether. -You are sent an old monitor, and a VDI system. The VDI mirrors in a cloud-based tab so they can remotely view your screen indefinitely. -You spend 90% of your day calling the "rejected lead" call list. Most of these numbers are either not in service, have been dialed more than 25 times, or people who have been asked to be removed from the call list but not marked properly in the system. -They will use their systems not functioning against you. Since the phones don't work, half the time you don't know if someone is on the other line, or if your system bugged out. Many employees have been fired for improper use of the phone system/CRM, but fail to acknowledge that it is incredibly hard to use a system correctly if it does not work. Then they blame their faulty systems on user error, who are then fired for "compliance" reasons, so the university can cover themselves. If this review sounds insane, it's because it is. This has been the worst company I have ever worked for BY FAR. They have fired 50% of their advisors since the beginning of December for "compliance" reasons, but this is to cover themselves from legal action. You are micromanaged, disrespected, berated, and bled dry for every ounce of work you are capable of putting in, only to be fired for things outside of your control. All for $40,000 a year. Do yourself a favor and find an actual sales role that will at least pay you a commission. Because at the end of the day, this is not an advising position. This is a predatory boiler room call center sales role.

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Post University Response
2y
Thank you for sharing your detailed feedback about your experience at Post University. We appreciate the time you spent with us and want to address the concerns you've raised. We are committed to fostering a work environment that respects employees and provides an extraordinary experience for our students. Our mission is to make quality education accessible to everyone, regardless of their background, and we are dedicated to ethical practices in our admissions processes. We regret if you experienced challenges during your time with us, and we acknowledge the importance of proper training and communication. Your insights on the systems and technology challenges are noted, and we are actively working to improve these aspects to enhance the overall experience for our employees. The well-being and satisfaction of our employees are of utmost importance. Your comments about leadership, workload, and communication will be carefully reviewed as part of our ongoing efforts to create a positive and supportive workplace. We encourage open communication, and if you are comfortable, we invite you to reach out to our HR department to discuss your concerns in more detail. Your feedback is invaluable, and it can contribute to our continuous improvement.
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Glassdoor has 378 Post University reviews submitted anonymously by Post University employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Post University is right for you.