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Marketing Management Analytics

Engaged Employer

Awful place to work. Stay away at all costs. - Senior Management Marketing Management Analytics Employee Review

1.0
Mar 10, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You'll get a ton of industry experience, but that comes at the expense of working 70+ hours a week. The people are the only good asset, but don't get too comfortable with them because most people burn out and leave in less than a year.

Cons

Churn. Average lifespan of an analyst is about 6 months, so you constantly have to train new hires. This also means that remaining team members are often left scrambling to meet deadlines. There is also no career path. Promotions usually occur after someone leaves the organization. Work life balance is nonexistent, you'll often work and travel during holidays. No one there has any qualms about loading your calendar with meetings on Labor Day.

Explore other reviews about Marketing Management Analytics

5.0
Jul 12, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Manager was very flexible and supportive, especially with interns who needed time to familiarize themselves with the company and its tech stack - Great WLB - Everyone on my team was very helpful and always available to help if need be

Cons

- Sometimes my manager would be busy with other work and I'd have no work/be stuck with a problem I couldn't solve myself, but this wasn't a big deal at all.

1.0
Jun 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The work itself is good and cutting edge.

Cons

Unfortunately, this company has a significant favoritism problem that directly impacts women and anyone outside of a specific social or cultural in-group. Here's what I've observed: • Women are disproportionately placed on Performance Improvement Plans (PIPs), often without clear justification or consistent standards applied across the team. • Promotions and raises are not tied to actual performance. People who deliver results consistently are passed over, while those with long personal friendships with management — some going back 25+ years — are rewarded regardless of output. • There is a clear cultural bias at play. Employees of Bengali background or those with close personal ties to management advance significantly faster, regardless of merit. • HR does not appear to address these patterns meaningfully. Complaints tend to disappear quietly.

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