Friendly team, but low pay and outsourcing concerns - Content Writer WPP Employee Review

1.0
1 Jul 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Friendly team. Plenty of holiday leave for those who want it.

Cons

Low pay. The company seems to operate by churning through graduates and replacing them with new (underpaid) fresh-out-of-college graduates. During my last year at the company, they were also beginning to outsource a lot of key technical roles - roles that require specific knowledge of the UK job's market and its mix of news titles - to India. I wonder if their clients, some of which pay vast sums of money for their media monitoring services, are aware that crucial tasks are being offshored to the sub-continent. Somehow I doubt it. I'll remember WPP and Martin Sorrel as a company that has helped usher the demise of what's left of the middle class in the UK's capital, as most of the people I knew working there were living in sub-standard conditions in suburban flat shares; others in dingy hotels.

Explore other reviews about WPP

5.0
12 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice company to work for

Cons

Nice company to work for and good people

4.0
15 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

After 5+ years here, the thing that keeps me is genuinely the people. The talent across this company is remarkable — collaborative, smart, and decent humans who make even the hard days manageable. The culture at the team level is something I haven't found elsewhere in this industry. The work itself is a real strength too. As a holding company, you get exposure to a diverse range of clients and challenges that keeps things fresh and stretches your skills in ways a single-agency role wouldn't. If you're curious and want to grow, the opportunities are there — you just have to be proactive about finding them. Flexibility has also improved meaningfully, and leadership has generally trusted senior employees to manage their own time.

Cons

Like most large holding companies, there are growing pains worth knowing about going in. Career pathing can feel ambiguous — it's not always clear what the criteria are for the next level or how decisions get made, though there are signs that more structured frameworks are being developed. Compensation conversations can be slow and incremental; the company is working to stay competitive but the process doesn't always move at the pace the market does. Workload and resourcing is a real tension — ambitious scopes don't always come with proportional headcount, and that can wear on teams. It's something leadership is visibly aware of and working to address. Similarly, as a large organization, internal processes and approvals can add friction. Not unusual for the holding company structure, but worth patience if you're used to a leaner environment.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All