Pros
Competitive Pay There are competent colleagues if you look hard enough Decent Brand/Name Recognition
Cons
This review is my experience within the marketing department** Leadership often appears competent only in comparison to a generally low organizational bar. In reality, there is a profound lack of foundational digital marketing knowledge and strategic depth. Managers frequently struggle with complex problem-solving and original strategy, showing a "cartoonish" rigidity that favors quantitative tools (Excel/Pivot tables) over actual creative or strategic agility. Without the work of high-performing subordinates to leverage, the lack of original authorship is glaring. The company lacks respect for intellectual property. A notable example involved dismissing a staffer’s campaign concept "Orange is the New Red") only to immediately implement and feature that exact tagline on event merchandise post-termination. This environment makes it impossible for creative professionals to feel their work is protected. The office operates with a helicopter parent dynamic. Leadership prioritizes surveillance and pedantic micromanagement such as scolding employees over minor punctuation or graph aesthetics while failing to address systemic strategic failures. This creates a middle school atmosphere that drains morale. Blatant favoritism creates an echo chamber where under-qualified managers protect one another, leading to a feedback loop of excuses and a total lack of meritocratic accountability. The result is an insular playground that feels disconnected from modern professional standards. While executive rhetoric focuses on "AI Agents" and innovation, the internal martech stack and operations are nearly a decade behind. This duct tape and bubblegum infrastructure, combined with high vendor turnover points to a systemic failure in long-term strategy.