Spectrum reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(18,919 total reviews)
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Chris Winfrey

53% approve of CEO

45% positive business outlook

Spectrum has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 18,919 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Spectrum employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Telecomunicações industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

19K reviews
2.0
Jul 10, 2011
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

* Friendly, fun coworkers * Most people are working hard to do a great job * Strong work/life balance * Good salary and benefits

Cons

* Enormous disconnects between market-driven inputs and short-term investment community demands. Company is lead by finance, with marketing and customer service very much secondary * No willingness whatsoever to endure short term discomfort in order to take a long-term approach that will reap larger benefits. An over reliance on the "Post Office Model" in which aggregate revenue targets are met by raising prices on a shrinking number of customers. * Entire leadership of marketing team - which was once the envy of the cable industry - has departed for greener pastures or is in the process of doing so. * Career advancement and succession planning is nearly non-existent, and promised opportunities are frequently not honored. * The leadership team that led the successful restructuring of the company via Chapter 11 has all departed. That team was data-driven, smart and strategic; the people currently in charge are clubby, gut-feeling types who have been known to ignore actual, empirical data and use simplistic models because the models are more favorable.

1.0
Apr 25, 2025

A JOKE

Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits are okay Free internet

Cons

My Experience: Working at Charter Communications was a major disappointment and fell far below the expectations set during the hiring process. From the very beginning, there were significant signs of unfairness that only became worse over time. Management often made decisions based on personal bias rather than performance or merit. It didn’t matter how hard you worked or what results you produced; if you weren’t part of a small inner circle of favorites, you were overlooked for opportunities, recognition, and even basic support. The toxic management style was one of the most damaging aspects of the experience. Managers operated through intimidation, fear tactics, and public embarrassment. Rather than being supportive leaders, they were micromanagers who created an environment where employees felt disposable and constantly on edge. The team environment was equally toxic. Gossip, backstabbing, and cliques dominated the workplace culture. Instead of promoting teamwork and collaboration, leadership encouraged unhealthy competition that bred resentment and sabotage among peers. It was clear that maintaining a cutthroat atmosphere was part of the company’s way of keeping employees desperate and replaceable. Favoritism was rampant across every level. Promotions, better territories, and any internal opportunities were handed out based on personal relationships rather than qualifications or results. It was disheartening to watch talented, hardworking individuals get passed over time and time again, while others advanced simply because of who they socialized with outside of work. The sales portfolios provided were often bad, containing accounts that had already been saturated or businesses that had been contacted multiple times without success. You were essentially set up to fail from the start. Promises of “opportunity-rich territories” during onboarding quickly revealed themselves to be completely untrue. Despite using our personal vehicles to conduct all business activities, you’ll get some car allowance. If you do it right. Finally, no leads were provided to us, despite it being a major selling point during the recruitment process. You were left to cold prospect endlessly, often with no tools, no support, and minimal resources. Leadership expected results but gave you none of the means to achieve them, creating a constant cycle of frustration and burnout. Summary: Overall, my time at Charter Communications was incredibly disappointing. The company talks a big game about culture, opportunity, and growth, but in reality, it is dominated by toxic leadership, favoritism, and a complete lack of employee support. Unless you’re prepared to work in a hostile environment with very little opportunity for real growth or success, I would strongly advise looking elsewhere. Austin, TX market

1.0
Apr 18, 2025

One of the most toxic work environments ever

Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

I can't think of any. I wasn't subjected to the cons listed, but the environment made me leave ASAP. Pay was okay.

Cons

* Harassment of female employees was swept under the rug * Employees were regularly berated by their managers to the point of screaming in-office * Long-term employees had their roles eliminated instead of layoffs to minimize severance payouts (and were let go at the end of the day)

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