Company Review - Sales Associate Viking Cruises Employee Review

2.0
6 May 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

diverse cruise Itineraries; excellent health/medical benefits; schedule is by shift bid; the training class is great; end of year bonus is still given

Cons

Management-needs improvement(how and what they communicate to employees-sometimes too condescending); Marketing(sends out misleading advertisements every month--it gets the phones to ring but not to result in sales-too often leads to complaints); don't allow sales agents to automatically give or apply a sale offer to the guests--they have to ask for it; Technology(systems are always on the fritz); Time Off(no true work/life balance); no longer a great place to work; too much micro managing; the bonus incentives are no longer offered; as with all companies, they manipulate calls and routing them to sales associates(so some will have better outcomes and higher revenue over others); constantly finding ways not to pay out commission

Explore other reviews about Viking Cruises

5.0
14 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good food on board, great team , pretty good beds only two person in the cabin, All the executives were really professional and good at their jobs and kind people.

Cons

It was a shame that anytime when there was a couple forming there was the possibility to be moved from your cabin and that happened quite often.

2.0
4 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The product is excellent, job is fully remote, provided equipment was excellent, and benefits package is top tier.

Cons

Training Was a Potemkin Village. The training experience and interviews presented a version of the job that bore little resemblance to the day-to-day reality once on the sales floor. Important details about compensation were not fully disclosed until after training, making it difficult to accurately evaluate the opportunity before investing significant time. The travel benefits that are heavily promoted during recruiting and training proved to be largely unattainable in practice. Getting vacation time approved or participating in familiarization trips was extremely difficult. The actual job consisted of constant outbound calling, relentless metric tracking, and micromanagement down to five-second increments between activities. Employees were closely monitored and frequently pressured regarding conversion metrics, including factors that were often outside their control. Scheduling can also be challenging. Most agents should expect non-consecutive days off, frequent late-night shifts, and regular weekend work. Schedule bids occur only twice per year and are heavily weighted toward tenure and production, giving long-tenured employees a significant advantage in obtaining desirable schedules. The management culture relied heavily on fear, write-ups, and threats of termination rather than coaching and development. Turnover was extraordinary. Roughly half of my training class was gone within the first month on the phones, and the vast majority had left before a year had passed.

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