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Conestoga-Rovers and Associates Employee Job Reviews in the United States

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0%
67%
0%
33%
0%
3.4
Average Rating
(based on 3 Conestoga-Rovers and Associates Review Ratings)

Ratings by Category

Company Culture
3.2
Growth Opportunities
2.3
People You Work With
4.2
Person You Work For
3.5
Rewards You Receive
3.3
Support You Get
3.7
Way You Work
4.7
Work Setting
2.7
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Field Staff Analyst

What do you like about working at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates?

"I really like the fact that working at Conestoga Rovers and Associates (CRA) gave me a new perspective on life. If you're ever feeling bored and get the feeling of hating to leave work too early, you certainly never get that feeling in the Irvine office. As a field staff, you are generally working 65 hours a week, that's a minimum. HR will tell you that they only care about 90% billability (ha ha 90%), BUT despite working like an indentured servant Monday through Thursday (working 13 hours per day), your supervisor stresses and encourages that you need to be in the office for a minimum of 8 hours on Friday. Post-college perspective: you go to college and accrue all your student loans just to be making roughly minimum wage. But you know whatby doing this work for the next 6 years of your life (starting your day at 4 am and coming home at 7pm only to be sleeping at 8pm) will help you advance your career ever so slightly. Because after 4-6 years of experience, you get to be in the awesome position of a Project manager (you know the people who carry on the torch of passing down the CRA work culture)."

What don't you like about working at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates?

"Also, my new perspective is that Hate is an understatement. (1)The job. What more can I say I guess in your interview with CRA you should ask if youre going to be in the Shell group. If the answer is yes, turn your back and never look back. a.Life (or lack of one) in the CRA-Irvine Shell group, will make you rue the day of accepting the job and signing your life away on the offer letter. (2)The Incident Report. You sit down and discuss for 1-2 hours why something went wrong the way it did (from the wide spectrum getting into a car accident with the company vehicle or getting a paper cut). The whole purpose is to figure why things when wrong. There are 3 general factors: personal, company, outside factors. (3)The transparent cover of the Health and Safety paperwork in order to elude liability. Every time you go over the Health and Safety meeting in the fields, its to relinquish all responsibility (ensure Shell, and consequently, CRA can never be sued. How is that possible Because you and everyone in the fields must sign and date stating that they understand the risk in order for work to start. (4)The Prostitution aka The Bid. Theres a job available, consultant firms across the board would bid for the job by estimating how much it would cost them to get the job complete. Usually, the consultant firm would be chosen if their bids are on the lower ends. Project managers (PMs) are then pressured to work with this nonexistent budget. Try to envision the money trickling down the pay-rate hierarchy. None.(5)The environmental remediation industry. It sounds great to be installing and monitoring groundwater wells to ensure and maintain a product-free (gasoline) water-table. Wrong. CRAs main goal is to satisfy the client (SHELL), whose whole point is to push these wells that obviously has high contamination/ product (basically gasoline) to closure. CRA will try to submit to the city/agency saying that theres very little contamination and that the contaminations are actually decreases over time. How is this done By removing outlier data points, and sending out the Shell-approved-data in the reports to the Agency. (6) Now combine everything together; cult-like work culture, micromanaging bosses, minimum wage, and Shell projects."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Assume that people can handle simple tasks without talking to them like they are an idiot. The condescending tone when answering questions are unnecessary."

Person You Work For 1 / 5 People You Work With 3 / 5 Work Setting 2 / 5
Support You Get 2 / 5 Rewards You Receive 1 / 5 Growth Opportunities 1 / 5
Company Culture 1 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Project Scheduling Analyst
Person You Work For 4.6 / 5 People You Work With 4.6 / 5 Work Setting 4.7 / 5
Support You Get 4.1 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3.8 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3.3 / 5
Company Culture 3.5 / 5 Way You Work 4 / 5
Desktop Publisher
Person You Work For 5 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 1.3 / 5
Support You Get 5 / 5 Rewards You Receive 5 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2.5 / 5
Company Culture 5 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Project Engineer

What do you like about working at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates?

"nice work place and settings with professional style"

What don't you like about working at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates?

"none of 401k match and pension for the first two years"

What suggestions do you have for management?

"I have no idea"

Conestoga-Rovers and Associates Reviews FAQs

Is Conestoga-Rovers and Associates a good company to work for?

Conestoga-Rovers and Associates has an overall rating of 3.4 Average Rating out of 5, based on over 3 Conestoga-Rovers and Associates Review Ratings left anonymously by Conestoga-Rovers and Associates employees, which is 13% lower than the average rating for all companies on CareerBliss. 67% of employees would recommend working at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates.

Does Conestoga-Rovers and Associates pay their employees well?

Conestoga-Rovers and Associates employees earn $69,500 annually on average, or $33 per hour, which is 5% higher than the national salary average of $66,000 per year. 0 Conestoga-Rovers and Associates employees have shared their salaries on CareerBliss. Find Conestoga-Rovers and Associates Salaries by Job Title.

How satisfied are employees working at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates?

67% of employees would recommend working at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates with the overall rating of 3.4 out of 5. Employees also rated Conestoga-Rovers and Associates 3.2 out of 5 for Company Culture, 3.3 for Rewards You Receive, 2.3 for Growth Opportunities and 3.7 for support you get.

What is the highest paying job at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates?

According to our data, the highest paying job at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates is a Office Manager at $131,000 annually. Browse Conestoga-Rovers and Associates Salaries by Job Profile.

What is the lowest paying job at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates?

According to our data, the lowest paying job at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates is a Secretary at $30,000 annually. Browse Conestoga-Rovers and Associates Salaries by Job Profile.

What are the pros and cons of working at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates?

According to reviews on CareerBliss, employees commonly rated the pros of working at Conestoga-Rovers and Associates to be Company Culture, People You Work With, Person You Work For and Rewards You Receive, and cons to be Growth Opportunities and Work Setting.

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