Risepoint Reviews

3.1

49% would recommend to a friend

(414 total reviews)

Fernando Bleichmar

56% approve of CEO

37% positive business outlook

Risepoint has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 414 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Risepoint employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Education industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

414 reviews
5.0
2 Oct 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The pay is what you might expect for a company focused solely on sales; average to slightly above average. There are still some professional, quality minded employees who work at AP. On a daily basis they do their best to serve their university and their students to the highest quality standards; however, these employees are fewer and far between as many have chosen to leave while many more continue to be fired.

Cons

Hostile work environment, disdain for quality employees, lack of innovative thinking, and management who manage by fear, intimidation, and coercion. One reviewer wrote employees are let go due to poor performance. Don't believe it. Turnover is high because of the hostile work environment created and enforced by all levels of management. It starts at the very top with Mr. Best and trickles all the way down through his yes-men rank and file. It has corroded this company to the core, yet, questionable personnel decidedly claw their way into management positions, conspiring with senior personnel for personal gain. Character assassination and sabotage of peers have become the status quo. Daily occurrences include misrepresentation, gossip, and innuendo. Exceptional employees are adversely labeled and then fired. Remaining personnel hear stories from Senior Management that their colleague(s) resigned, when in actuality they were forced out. Why? For what purpose? It is inexplicable, as management never holds itself accountable to anyone, for anything. They take no responsibility for their illogical and reactive decisions, they ignore the toxic reality they've created, and they refuse to listen to the truth from employees who still care. Care about an innovative, proactive work environment? Keep looking because you won't find it here. The only innovation at AP is the creative gloss-over of empty sales promises pitched to attract new university clients. Antiquated telemarketing tactics, dialing a student multiple times per day; these are acts of desperation, not innovation, and are tantamount to harassment. You won't have to dig deep, just look carefully below the surface to realize that the risk of associating with AP is born by the employee and the university client. Personnel who speak up about these concerns, out of concerns for sub-par student and university representation, out of concerns for colleagues, and those who do not tow the party line, put a target on their back and are at risk of being the next employee kicked to the curb. The deceitful business practices and the sadistic, cutthroat culture of this company are deplorable. Morale has hit rock bottom. It is an absolute shame what AP has become. For your piece of mind, if you care about the quality of your work, if you care about your client and about your professional reputation, than do not join the downtrodden ranks of AP.

1.0
25 Feb 2016

How are you still in business?

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Negative experience at Academic Partnerships.

Cons

Revolving door for those who are trying to do the right thing. Horrible mismanagement and disorganization, almost exclusively at the top. Higher level individuals are focused and obsessed with titles like "Senior Vice President", "Executive Director", or "Manager of this/that" without any care for those working under them. A very power-hungry culture is ingrained in the people at AP and it all starts at the top. No policies or procedures are put into place for doing things. This is alarming not only for the company, but also for employees who are signing up to be treated unfairly. Fear is instilled in the people due to changes happening constantly and abruptly. There is no say in any of these changes -you must accept them or be forced to leave. If you speak up you will be looked down upon by upper management. This is a poorly run business with corrupt individuals running the show. The higher-ups waltz around the 8th and 9th floors with their business suits on, making sure everyone notices and realizes that they are in power. It seems the only way AP is still around is because the founder is a very wealthy individual who can fire SVPs and pay them severance to stay away and not make a peep (aka - pay them to stay quiet). The number of people who have had jobs with AP is surreal - just look on LinkedIn at the number of people who have held a position with AP for less than a year. Each position has had an insurmountable amount of people in the roles - again, a revolving door. People come and work for a few months and leave once they see how poorly mismanaged and corrupt this company truly is. I don't ever post reviews on these websites but this is one worth warning others about. My position that I left at AP 3 years ago has now seen two others in it and as of recently, the latest person just left. This place was a nightmare and I am really relieved to have gotten out when I did.

1.0
4 Sept 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good location. Nice building. A lot of food options. Close to DART.

Cons

I knew Academic Partnerships was not a good place to work when I was there but now that I am looking back on my experience at AP, I cannot express to you enough how bad it was. It is the most poorly run, mismanaged, immoral company I have ever been a part of. Executive leadership hires people on a whim, promises them the world, only to fire them a few months later. Decisions are not based on any metrics or data – They are based on how leadership is feeling that particular day. I came to work every day thinking that day could be my last. Leadership picks and chooses who they pay well, give raises, to, give bonuses to, give stock options to, etc. – There is no rhyme or reason to any of it. Pay ranges do not exist nor does equality of pay for those at the same level. There is zero professional development and zero career paths. They rarely hire within so they don’t care about investing in their current employees. Once you are in a job, you will be there forever (and you may even have to reapply for your exact same job – Yes, this actually happened to one department). Academic Partnerships does not have a good reputation in the education industry. When I was looking for jobs, I quickly learned that a lot of companies have a policy of not hiring employees from Academic Partnerships because they know what a toxic, shady, and poorly run company it is. I know HR will reply to this review saying that this isn’t true, they don’t “incentivize” employees to write positive reviews, etc.; however, it is all done under the table and “discreetly” (except for the fact that employees talk).

Viewing 1 - 3 of 414 Reviews

Glassdoor has 439 Risepoint reviews submitted anonymously by Risepoint employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Risepoint is right for you.