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Bright Innovation

Is this your company?

An insult to women-led businesses - Anonymous employee Bright Innovation Employee Review

1.0
4 Mar 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You get the opportunity to work with well-known brands in the B2B industry, offering valuable exposure and industry insights. Employees gain extensive hands-on experience, as they are often required to take on responsibilities beyond their core job scope.

Cons

The most concerning is the lack of professionalism at the highest level of leadership. Despite marketing Bright Innovation as a progressive, inclusive workplace, the reality is quite different. Constructive feedback or concerns about working conditions are met with hostility. Dismissals are handled unprofessionally, often via private messages or in front of colleagues, with little regard for basic respect or dignity. Job security is constantly in flux, and employees are left feeling disposable. Redundancies are almost a monthly occasion. Inclusivity is also a fake value, as they view their offshore team as a cost-saving measure rather than recognising them as experts based outside the UK. An unhealthy work culture environment where boundaries and respect for working hours are disregarded. Zoe Merchant and directors frequently send requests outside of working hours, expecting urgent turnaround first thing in the morning, creating an ongoing cycle of pressure and burnout. One of the most concerning aspects is the company's approach to resource allocation. Despite working in a technology-driven industry, employees are expected to navigate complex projects with insufficient tools. When paid software is essential for project completion, staff members are often asked to use personal credit cards or are granted bare minimum subscriptions for strictly limited periods. This penny-pinching mentality extends to all aspects of operations, prioritising cost-saving over work quality and employee wellbeing. Employees are tasked with extensive research into emerging technologies, but there is no commitment to implementing them, particularly if it requires financial investment. The company is more concerned with appearing trendy to clients than delivering meaningful progress. For professionals who value quality work and authentic professional growth, this environment poses significant challenges. The overall approach prioritises speed and volume over quality, leaving employees with unrealistic deadlines and ever-changing priorities, and also uncertainty around ability to take leave as the constant pressure and understaffing make it difficult for employees to step away. This chaotic workflow not only diminishes the quality of output but also forces employees to question their own abilities, as leadership often lacks clear direction or understanding of what they actually want. Collaboration is superficial at best. Success is always framed as a collective “we” achievement, while any challenges or failures are solely attributed to individual employees. This blame culture creates a toxic atmosphere where accountability is one-sided. Bright Innovation operates on a foundation of empty promises. Employees are often lured in with attractive benefits, such as professional development, internal promotions, marketing training and more, only to find out later that these perks do not exist in practice.

Explore other reviews about Bright Innovation

5.0
19 Nov 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

very nice people and always helpful

Cons

theres not really any cons.

2.0
14 Oct 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A lot of non-director colleagues are genuinely talented, supportive, and empathetic. Most stay here because of each other, not because of the company. Clients are mostly great to work with and are the only bright spot in an otherwise chaotic environment. Theoretical opportunities for training and career development look good on paper but rarely materialise.

Cons

Micromanagement beyond reason: Every email, message, and piece of client communication is dissected by directors. Employees are given zero trust or autonomy. Independence is viewed as insubordination. Gaslighting as management style: Feedback and concerns are routinely dismissed. Directors contradict themselves, deny previous conversations, and blame everyone but themselves. Non-directors are constantly undermined and belittled. Work–life imbalance: Holidays are guilt-tripped even after approval, you’re made to feel irresponsible for having a life outside work especially if a client has a running project. Boundaries don’t exist as only the directors’ convenience does. Empty promises: Training, accreditation, and progression are repeatedly promised but delayed, deprioritised, or forgotten altogether. Employees are left to figure it out while being judged for not performing miracles. A promotion here is not in their interest. Culture of fear and control: Directors make disrespectful remarks about offshore colleagues and try to put colleagues against each other, they thrive on an individuals disruption as that makes them weak. The culture changes daily depending on who’s in the room or what mood leadership is in. Burnout and mental exhaustion: The environment is emotionally draining, psychologically manipulative, and unsustainable. Capable, confident professionals leave questioning their abilities and worth. Dishonest exit handling: When people leave whether by choice or through “redundancy” leadership hides the truth, delays client communication, and rewrites narratives in attempt to protect themselves.

3
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