I sympathise with the above. I worked - briefly, very bruefly - for the company and can honestly say this is not unusual practise.
IBDG offers 'trageted stratergy meetings' with companies 'who have expressed an interest in your company's product'. They promise (during the initial call) 7-13 meetings 'so prepare for a busy day'.
All good. no?
Let me start with the new hopeful employee joining IBDG. He or she will be interviewed by either the Company or Sales Director in a cafe around the corner from the office 'because it's to busy in there, you can't hear yourself think'.
This cnadidate will be responding to an advertisment from a company called Aida Recruitment. Check the website. Aida promote themselves as a recruitment agency for jobs in the EC1-EC5 area.
After your meeting with the IBDG director, you are rung by Aida to ascertain what you think. If you do not give the 'right' answer it goes no further.
Ther is only one or two interviews. Once you have started (and gotten over the shock of the office which looks like a travel bucket shop) Aida will ring you again to find out what you think. Again your future depends on giving the 'right' answer (ie. everything's great, positive, am looking foward to get going etc).
If at any time you give the honest answer you are sacked. You see, Aida oes not exist. It is one girl in the IBDG offic next to the company director. The jobs they advertise are asll for the IBDG Londn office on Gower Street. It is all the same job but marked as at 'Farrendon' or 'The Barbican' or 'EC1'.
The new starter is expected to make 120 calls a day using a turgid four page script from which you cannot divert. At all. IBDG specialises in areas of IT, Human Resources, Financial Sevices, Pensions, etc. A team of four or five individuals to each sector.
The canddate is given a contract of employment which states you canot work for another company like IBDG when you leave and cannot complain about IBDG when you are gone.
Illegal.
If you do not sign, you are fired.
Sales leads are taken from magazine advertisments, other events with no reference to the Corporate Preference Service. The reason why IBDG was so keen to seal the deal early is that the company's dogma is 'get them on the first call'. If they ask for some proof the line is 'Well, I can send you a PDF but we are extremely protective of our unique (sic) business model. What is it that is troubling you?'
Anything to get the sign up there and then.
All calls are recorded by the candidate on a hand held recorder (supposedly for training purposes) and also on disc at head office (Milton Keynes) for sales leads. The company you are talking to are not told this.
This breaks OFCOM rules.
Sickness policy is interesting. Your contract tates you must phone the company director but gives you no phone number. If you do manage to have the misfortune of falling ill, you are called by the office on your first day of sickness to ask when you are coming back.
This is against recent EU laws and can be construed as undue pressure. Indeed, the Sales Trainer broke her leg and was told if she did not turn up on the second day of her injury she would not have a job to come back to.
The Sles Director broke his Achiles tendon and was given a similar ultimaum.
During the phone call to an interested company, the agent will ask the company who they consider their competition 'so I make sure no one here books them, we've got a massive office you see'. They then ring these other companies and say the first company is interested so 'you should be'. If anything is mentioned on the day of the meetings, the first company is told that 'Unfortunately when we talked they were aready booked'.
The 7-13 meeting in reality is about 3 (if you are lucky). On the day the sales agents run around trying to fix up any meeting with anybdy. In other words, a complete waste of time. Business from these meetings is scarce.
The reason for the high pressure/underhand selling is these IBDG agents are given little or no training and 3 months (on the outside) to make a sale. If they dn't. they are sacked. Staff turnover is at about 95%.
Look at the IBDG website. There is no accreditation from any company. If they send you their PDF with a list of companies who have used IBDG. What they don't tell you is that is the list is about 90% delegates. They are invited for free under false pentenses of a topic they might be interested in, a free lunch, etc.
I was once witnes to one f their managers falsifying a 'Green Agenda' to get a sale. Complaints would be dealt ith on th day. Lest you think this be a new member of staff, this as someone who was the Company Director's right hand woman and had been there five years.
IBDG's London office failed (to a heavy fine) the local Council's Health and Safety inspection. (Employers' Insurance was not considered necessary.) Their details were reported to the DTI. They have gone through two Sales Directors in two years.
Should the Company Director of IBDG see this (a paranoid, volatile man) and wish to dispute this (under a psuedonym as his is usual practise) all the above is documented. Those hand sized recorders come in handy for things other than taping calls.
Avoid this company (whether you are a prostective employee or a prospective advertiser) like the plague.
Sir, you have my condolescences.
Former Employee