If you want growth or support, stay away - Anonymous employee Big Red Employee Review

1.0
Jan 10, 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

company paid health insurance and a well stocked kitchen

Cons

If you are a woman, don't work here. There are no women in leadership positions and there's no sign that will change soon. There is no support, no cooperation between departments and the atmosphere is cold and secretive. Turnover rate is high, to say the least, in the marketing department. If you expect even the slightest bit of cordiality from a manager, this is not the place to work. There's little effort to build a team atmosphere. Similarly, this is not an atmosphere to have a position where you hope to learn new skills. Most projects don't come with all the information needed to begin to tackle the project. Questions are not welcomed and neither are ideas from non-management.

Explore other reviews about Big Red

5.0
Apr 13, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

great team and management. Work was something to look forward to every day.

Cons

There was nothing bad about the job

2.0
Sep 23, 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great/generous company-paid benefits, good work life balance, fully stocked kitchen. Office hours 9a-6p, very manageable pace and volume of work. Friendly coworkers, super IT. VP of Sales a strong, committed leader.

Cons

Employees and employee engagement not important to leadership. No emphasis on building effective teams or to simply creating an environment people want to work in. High turnover results from management’s clear lack of trust in employees at every level. Very low tolerance for new ideas or taking risks. All-male leadership team permits sexist, old-fashioned and demeaning commentary towards women during open meetings. Departments are kept separate and working with different departments collaboratively is frowned upon. Top leadership takes a narrow view of what each department is “supposed to do” and employees are reprimanded when working too openly with other departments. Decision making process is typically emotional vs. rational and often appears to be driven by fear and distrust. Marketing is not respected as a function; it is a sales-led company that treats marketing as a support group instead of a strategic driver. Traditional CPG brand managers or general-management-style marketers need not apply here; the department doesn’t work that way, and doesn’t seem to want to.

5
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