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Universal Technical Institute

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Best job I've ever had - Recensione dipendente - Front Desk Receptionist presso Universal Technical Institute

5,0
13 dic 2019
Consiglia
Gradimento del CEO
Pronostico commerciale

Vantaggi

Friendly and kind staff Lots of windows and sunlight Everyone willing to help one another, very team oriented Truly cares about the students UTI always gets involved by charities like food pantries, holiday angels so students children can have a Christmas etc.. Fun team atmosphere Lots of fun activities going on for staff and students, games,prizes, food, etc Very appreciated, always thanked and recognized for going a step above Fair to staff and treats staff well Decent pay Innovative and always progressing Involved with students to help them navigate through school and life Employers constantly requesting UTI students for their skill and knowledge

Svantaggi

Benefits expensive Pay could be higher

Esplora altre recensioni su Universal Technical Institute

5,0
29 mag 2026
Consiglia
Gradimento del CEO
Pronostico commerciale

Vantaggi

Great team and collaboration among the different departments.

Svantaggi

Very fast paced work environment.

1,0
20 mag 2026
Dipendente anonimo
Consiglia
Gradimento del CEO
Pronostico commerciale

Vantaggi

- Many great instructors and employees at the campus level who genuinely care about students and the programs. - Fast-paced environment where you can learn a lot quickly and gain experience in many different areas. - Strong camaraderie among the employees that "wear many hats" because they are constantly working together to solve problems and keep operations running.

Svantaggi

- Employees are often treated more like numbers or operational costs than people. - High performers are heavily relied on, but the reward is usually more work instead of meaningful raises, promotions, or recognition outside of an "atta boy". - Employees who stepped up to fill operational gaps often spent years handling responsibilities far outside their job descriptions because leadership depended on them to keep things functioning. - The frustrating part was that after years of being encouraged to “help wherever needed,” employees could suddenly be told not to touch anything outside their official role and to let other departments fail instead. This created constant conflicting direction depending on which manager you spoke to, and employees could end up getting criticized no matter which instruction they followed in their pursuit of always being helpful and part of the team. - There were managers who genuinely cared and tried to solve problems, but there were also layers of management that often seemed more focused on justifying their role or protecting end of course survey scores than actually fixing operational issues. - Decision-making from upper management was frequently disconnected from the day-to-day realities of running the campus. Experienced employees were often overruled by people with limited understanding of the operational consequences of those decisions. - The transition after UTI acquired MIAT highlighted a major disconnect between corporate and campus upper management and specialized programs like aviation. Experienced employees repeatedly warned that aviation and other specialized programs could not be managed the same way as automotive campuses, but those concerns were often dismissed with "management knows best" until compliance-related issues became much more serious and employees had to play clean up. - Instructors were too often undermined in order to protect student satisfaction metrics and survey scores instead of reinforcing accountability and standards.

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