Great visions but abusive - Energy Advisor Franklin Energy Employee Review

1.0
Aug 4, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great coworkers, great visions of what a company should be , sorry the review is 20 words minimum and i cant think of any other pros

Cons

Outrageous management, over 55 hours every week being salary, the manager quit after two week , underpaid, abused .......this is 2015 .... Hiring agency are lying....and when you tell them you want to quit they drop the bomb on you telling you have to pay all their classes you have to take to become certified , just a useless company

Explore other reviews about Franklin Energy

5.0
Nov 6, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Growing company Helping the environment Helping clients, customers, contractors, and team members Flexible hours Remote work for many roles Teams where everyone feels a part Creative and extremely intelligent thought leaders and industry experts Jobs for every personality and skillset

Cons

Contracted work so things change from time to time

1.0
May 15, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* Some talented people that are seriously trying * You can say you work in sustainability

Cons

This organization is weighed down by a culture that prioritizes internal bureaucracy over actually supporting the people who drive revenue. Support functions like accounting, payroll, IT, legal, and recruiting consistently create friction instead of removing it. Processes feel designed for the convenience of those teams rather than the business as a whole. Simple things like expense reporting, travel booking, payroll, or accessing systems are unnecessarily complicated and slow. Training is another weak point. The bar for what qualifies as “training” or “subject matter expertise” is surprisingly low. Sessions often lack depth, practical relevance, and real industry credibility. It’s hard to take them seriously or apply much of what’s taught. There are also too many non-value-added processes: 1) You need to submit tickets just to access basic systems—even when no approval is required. 2) Benefits are overly complex and difficult to understand, with too many niche programs instead of focusing on strong core offerings. 3) The recruiting process is so convoluted it requires long training sessions just to navigate it. On top of that, the company talks a lot about values but seems to miss the basics - consistent, high-quality execution. There’s far too much emphasis on “big moments” and not enough focus on just doing everyday work well. Transparency is poor. When you ask why something is done a certain way, the default answer is “it’s policy” or “it’s how we’ve always done it.” That kind of thinking kills trust and makes it clear that improvement isn’t a priority. There is a lot of feedback forms and listening sessions but nothing changes. Also no communication on what is done with the feedback The biggest issue, though, is HR leadership. The Chief People Officer spent their entire career as a recruiter—and now they’re responsible for the entire HR function. What a joke. It shows in how disconnected HR policies and processes are from actual operational needs.

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