Good company to work for in Marketing - Marketing Manager Megger Employee Review

5.0
May 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good Company to work for in Marketing

Cons

No cons at present in company

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Megger Response
1w
Thanks for sharing your feedback – it’s really appreciated. It’s great to hear you’ve had a positive experience working within the marketing function and that you see Megger as a good place to work. Feedback like this is especially valuable coming from someone with several years’ experience in the business and across a different region. We’re always pleased when people feel supported in their roles and enjoy the work they’re doing. We’ll continue to focus on making sure that stays consistent as the business evolves globally, so that strong experiences like yours are reflected across all teams and locations. Thanks again for taking the time to leave a review.

Explore other reviews about Megger

5.0
Oct 21, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture is great. No constant drama, everyone minds their own and helps as much as possible.

Cons

Pay is not the greatest

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Megger Response
8mo
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. We’re delighted to hear that you enjoy our culture and feel supported by your colleagues—that’s something we truly value at Megger! We also appreciate your honest comment regarding pay. We continuously review our compensation and benefits to ensure they remain competitive and fair, and your feedback helps us keep improving. Thanks again for being part of the Megger team and helping us maintain such a positive working environment.
2.0
Apr 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great coworkers, a lot of OT opportunities if that’s your thing, learn a lot of skills, easy to collaborate across locations which was always nice

Cons

Toxic regional manager, they don’t have a good safety culture and will often dismiss your safety concerns instead of addressing them because they have a singular point of data that “proves” you’re okay (you’re not). unfair expectations and standards between people of the same or higher level, very difficult to get promoted no matter how many 5s you receive on your evaluations, hard to establish a healthy work/life balance, management has 0 empathy when you are going through a devastating loss, PTO is always a competition and you’re guilted into not using it, and some lab managers (TX Lab) are Mean Girls stuck in high-school and talk so alarmingly bad about their own employees and others, often making up lies about them to make themselves look better. This job will suck the will to live out of you and destroy your mental health, and you will be gaslit into thinking you suck at your job because you need time to address things in your personal life. The workload is so horribly mismanaged and divided that you will likely get stuck with 75% of the work and don’t take any breaks because you can’t while someone who sits on their phone and takes 5 breaks a day gets 25% of the work. Management also allows clients to call the lab and berate and demean you because they didn’t send their samples in correctly and it’s somehow your fault. Quitting is your best option if you ever start here.

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Megger Response
1w
Thanks for taking the time to leave such detailed feedback – especially after a long period with the business. It’s really positive to hear you valued your colleagues, the skills you built, and the collaboration across locations. Those are important strengths in lab operations and it’s good to see them recognised. That said, the concerns you’ve raised around leadership behaviour, consistency of standards, workload balance, and especially wellbeing and empathy are serious. Even where experiences differ across teams and regions, themes like these matter, because they directly affect trust, safety culture, and how supported people feel day to day. We also take comments around safety culture and workload management very seriously. Everyone should feel able to raise concerns without them being dismissed, and expectations should be fair and consistent across teams. Where that isn’t happening, it’s something we need to understand and address. Similarly, feedback about how people are treated during difficult personal circumstances is something no organisation can afford to ignore. Compassion and flexibility in those moments should be a given, not something people feel they have to fight for. We appreciate you sharing this perspective. Even when experiences are difficult to read, they help highlight where we need to keep improving leadership capability, consistency, and how we support employee wellbeing across all sites.
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