Pluspunten
Job security — because nobody else wants to take over your desk once they see what’s on your screen. Benefits are ok, but not above average for a company of this size.
Minpunten
A typical day at work: A typical day at BrokerLink begins with a battle — not with customers, but with technology. You arrive early hoping to get settled before the phones start ringing, only to find yourself wrestling with systems that feel like relics of a bygone era. The telephony system may or may not connect you properly, and if it does, you count yourself lucky. It was “upgraded” months ago, but somehow manages to perform worse than the one it replaced. Ten months later, leadership is adding more features — not fixing the foundation. That sets the tone for the day. Once you’re in, you’ll navigate a maze of internal platforms and external systems, all of them stitched together like a patchwork quilt of outdated software. Each one has its own quirks, login process, and frequent crashes. Efficiency feels like a distant dream. What I learned: If nothing else, you’ll learn patience — or maybe resignation. You’ll learn how to troubleshoot things that shouldn’t need troubleshooting, how to decipher unclear processes that change quarterly, and how to survive without clear direction. You’ll learn that “adaptability” at BrokerLink doesn’t mean growth or innovation; it means enduring broken systems, half-updated procedures, and the revolving door of frustrated employees. Management: Management is well-meaning in words, but disconnected in action. They will talk down to you in front of your co-workers. Decisions feel reactive rather than strategic, and frontline feedback rarely seems to reach anyone who can make a difference. The communication loop is broken — messages from the top are full of optimism, but the reality on the floor feels like triage. There’s a sense that leadership measures success by how well problems are ignored rather than solved. Workplace culture: The culture can best be described as corporate endurance. “Whip harder, work harder” could be the unofficial motto. Collaboration happens mostly in the form of collective venting. Burnout is common, but not acknowledged. Those who raise concerns are often told to “trust the process” — the same process that keeps changing or failing. Innovation isn’t part of the culture; survival is. The hardest part of the job: The hardest part, is the constant friction. Every tool, process, and communication feels like it adds one more cut. You want to do good work for your clients, but you’re constantly slowed down by inefficiency and confusion. Even when you manage to close a sale, it’s hard to feel satisfaction knowing the next client interaction could be another technological or procedural nightmare. The most enjoyable part of the job: The best moments come from your coworkers — the few who still care enough to help, share a laugh, or find humour in the chaos. There are pockets of great people trying to make the best of a broken environment. Unfortunately, they’re swimming upstream. Leadership communicates exclusively through inspirational PowerPoints.