Sales - Anonymous employee TK Elevator Employee Review

1.0
Dec 1, 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The only pros are that it is a big company with a big market share but for sure that's going to reduce as you will see below. Pay is OK.

Cons

Company has a knack for hiring people who are not at all qualified for their jobs especially in sales and even after working here for long time, those people have still not picked up. Criteria for hiring people seems to be only networking or knowing the right people on personal levels or even just being the right color. Experience and technical knowledge is last on their list. Diversity is at rock bottom as visible minorities even though they may be qualified are only at lower levels and absolute know-nothings are at all the higher levels. Case in point is that their modernization sales people literally sub-contracts modernization jobs to a rival company just because the mod sales person is not technically savvy to know what exactly is to be quoted. The rival company then goes to job site and does the survey and presents the quote to the mod sales person who then applies his mark-up and submits to the customer.

Explore other reviews about TK Elevator

5.0
Feb 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

TK Elevator is a company where people are motivated and happy to work . Very helpful

Cons

Nothing as such, all seems to be good

2.0
Jun 16, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

TK Elevator has a recognizable brand and offers exposure to a large, complex organization. There are opportunities to work with talented individuals and gain experience supporting a broad range of operations. Compensation and benefits are competitive, and the company has the resources to drive meaningful initiatives.

Cons

My experience was that the work environment was highly dependent on individual leadership styles. Communication and expectations were not always consistent, and there was limited emphasis on coaching, employee development, and constructive feedback. As a result, the environment could at times feel reactive rather than collaborative. Work-life balance and employee well-being appeared to vary considerably across teams. Employees who value transparency, empowerment, and a supportive leadership culture should take time during the interview process to understand the management philosophy of their prospective team, as experiences may differ significantly depending on reporting structure.

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