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  • Report:  #585261

Complaint Review: TMG CERTIFIED PAYMENT PROCESSING CPP ETC - Internet

Reported By:
Anonymous - , Nationwide, United States of America
Submitted:
Updated:

TMG CERTIFIED PAYMENT PROCESSING CPP ETC
Internet, United States of America
Phone:
18664711099
Web:
tmg-360.com
Tell us has your experience with this business or person been good? What's this?
TMG contacted me after I posted to monster.com. I was rushed through a "hiring process" like many others on this website. I spent eight hours in training via a Webinar today and began filling out my employment packet immediately following the conference conclusion. I had a lot of unanswered questions and several doubts (immediately suppressed by those big commission opportunities), but here is where the flags really started to fly...

The employment contract I read earlier was the biggest of many red flags, as it appears to be highly illegal and undoubtedly immoral. The contract outright asks the employee in training to sign a statement preventing any present or future legal action against the employer and several other covenants that are highly questionable and, to be quite honest now that I have shredded the W4, laughable. Only a company operating its business as repulsively as TMG would have to "COVER THEIR ASSets" by preventing someone from legal action in a contractual bind between their company and that individual, its own employee. Also, right out of the actual contract (SECTION 6.07 if you have the agreement still), TMG  states;

"If any term, provision, covenant or condition of this agreement is held by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, illegal, void or unenforceable in any jurisdiction, then such provision, covenant or condition shall, as to such jurisdiction, be modified or restricted to the extent necessary to make such provision valid..."

I am not a lawyer but here's how I have come to understand the excerpt: The very ludicrous contract, apparently legal under The United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas (TMG is based in Dallas/Fort Worth), enables TMG to put absolute restraint on its employees' legal rights, more so, I'm assuming, than most districts in this great nation. That would make the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas TMG's best friend and provide a perfect setting for a shafty (i may have made that word up) company to do shafty business at its leisure, covering its a*s by adding a covenant that basically says, "If any of the bull---- we wrote above is illegal in the locations we have hired employee's of our company, they will be required to attend court on our home turf (SECTION 6.06) OR, your court's judge can take out certain clips and phrases to make this binding contract as strict as your local law allows.

I am getting awfully tired after a Webinar program that almost had me signing the contract anyway, merely so I could say I hadn't actually skipped a legitimate interview this afternoon because, "I got a sweet new gig with some credit card dudes that seemed really cool over the phone." You'll have to excuse my unedited, unadulterated writing, but I find it necessary if it can convince, at the very least, one person

NOT TO SIGN THAT W-4!!!!

TMG or PCC or SUMMIT or whatever else they call themselves is a well thought out, well executed SCAM. But don't feel bad if you sat through that d**n webinar like I did; I noticed a past recruiter for the company wrote about some 18,200 new-hires at the MSC (Merchant Sales Consultant) level each year (with an annual retention of less than 500 of those employees). So you and I are getting out early. Good luck with your job search, keep your faith in this wonderful nation and push on.


Addition::::: Review many of the other complaints on this site. There is so much more than I had looked into earlier. Complaints from clients of CCP and its subsidiaries, as well as new-hires. Here's my opinionated suggestion: Do not submit for employment, these guys are _______s.


2 Updates & Rebuttals

Sean

Azle,
Texas,
United States of America
Really What

#2General Comment

Fri, September 24, 2010

Seems that the contract as stated mentioned nothing about an arbitration policy. I have signed my share of agreements and there is almost always something along the lines of an agreement to settle out of court in arbitration. I happened to not see one there.


PktChg

Texas,
USA
Really??

#3UPDATE EX-employee responds

Wed, September 15, 2010

First off Cheif,

It's called Arbitration.  You might want to look it up.....it is standard procedure for contractual means nowadays.  Also, you are a REPRESENTATIVE of the company, NOT an officer; which means the company will not be held liable for any incorrect info you tell the merchant "just to get the deal done."


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