Pay is a joke, even if you try to negotiate. Management plays favorites and it's painfully obvious. Assistant account executives sometimes make just as much or more than the account executives, which is ridiculous considering the assistants get overtime and the account executives don't AND the acct execs have to work nights and weekends.
Acct execs get "bonuses", but they're absolutely pitiful compared to what you would be making in overtime.
You can try to negotiate your salary all you want, but it doesn't do any good. You'll just be told that the budget only allows for whatever they're offering. It won't matter how many excellent evals you get back. It doesn't change anything. You can work your back end off to make the client, transferees, and management happy (and succeed), but you will not be rewarded for it. Not monetarily anyway.
There's no consistency across the board when it comes to salary. It's very damaging to employee morale. However, this is a common complaint and nothing changes, so don't expect it to.
The benefits are awful. If you're never sick, you'll love them. The premiums are pretty decent if you're a single person. But if you ever get sick, kiss those paltry bonuses and COL raises goodbye and god help you. The deductible for a single person is $2000.
And before anyone says this is common everywhere, it's not. My husband works at a large company nearby and has excellent medical coverage (god, how I miss $25 co-pays).
NEI frequently boasts about all its benefits (you'll get reimbursed $20/mo for a gym membership if you go at least 8 times a month, there's employee appreciation breakfasts and a holiday dinner, etc.). Ok. How about instead of spending money on these things, invest it in your employees' salaries?
Additionally, there's no mental health coverage. Except they'll tell you that their FSA and HSA options should "cover that".
Also, the training is constantly changing. So what you learned when you began becomes almost completely obsolete within a year. And then they wonder why everyone follows different processes and gets confused and frustrated when they try to fix it.
I get it. I know it's good to always strive to streamline processes and better ourselves and all that, but NEI needs to recognize how frustrating it is (in addition to everything else above) to their employees.
Unfortunately, there is no shortage of people able and willing to come in a work for what they offer (I was one of them and I'm still there because I can't afford to switch jobs right now), so nothing will change.
They like to promote the fact that they were voted Best Place to Work, but what they don't mention is that that hasn't been true since 2014 or 2015 because their employees are becoming more and more frustrated.
Finally, as with just about any job, there is cattiness and backstabbing all over the place. Problem is, many of the directors are the source of said cattiness and backstabbing. This is also a huge source of poor employee morale. Yes, it's been reported, and no, nothing has been done.