Used and abused - Anonymous employee Resonance Employee Review

2.0
Apr 6, 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazingly talented and intelligent colleagues who have a true passion for what they do. Great learning and mentoring opportunities from managers. Interesting projects.

Cons

Resonance leadership and HR specifically have made what should be a great place to work into a toxic and dysfunctional organization. It is rampant with unfair and biased hiring and advancement practices, fear of repercussions for speaking out, and sadly lacks any sense of equity, inclusiveness or transparency from the top down. Under the guise of implementing the company's strategic growth goals, leadership has effectively given HR full power over promotional and salary decisions, regardless of performance reviews, tenure, or supervisors' recommendations. The result has been to completely disengage even the most loyal employees, who instead of being rewarded for their hard work with growth opportunities feel stagnant and overlooked, leading us to watch our best talent walk out the door. Instead of learning from or reacting to their staff's feedback and concerns, leadership is plowing ahead and seems intent on turning what was once a small business into a churn and burn consulting firm.

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Resonance Response
4y
Thank you for your comments. I am sorry you are so disappointed with your journey at Resonance. As the founder of the company, it can be difficult to read such critical feedback, but I appreciate the fact that you cared enough to provide it. I would like to respond and offer a few thoughts: 18 mo ago we hired a highly experienced Chief People Officer. In doing so, we made it very clear to the company that we were elevating the HR function from a support function to a central role. As a consulting firm whose core asset is our talent, putting our people at the heart of what we do is essential. We make no apologies for this. Prior to the CPO’s arrival, supervisors had broad discretion in making promotion and salary decisions. As we grew, this created significant inequities across the firm as some supervisors were very demanding and others tolerated mediocrity. Staff were sometimes promoted on very specious grounds and then unable to succeed in their new role. Therefore, much of the CPO’s efforts have been focused on reducing bias through the introduction of new processes and policies, following best practices as set by SHRM and other professional bodies. We have standardized the process by which performance reviews are conducted and salary and promotion decisions are made. This necessarily reduces supervisor (including leadership) discretion, but it is vital if we are to achieve the equity portion of our DEI goals. Where we – as leaders- fell short of the mark is on communicating the rationale and importance of these changes. The Extended Leadership Team has taken this lesson to heart and we are making a much more concerted effort to communicate policy changes more consistently and clearly. Resonance is in no way a ‘churn and burn’ firm. We invest enormous resources in our employee well-being. We offer flexible work schedules. We offer remote and hybrid work options. We have a wellness benefit. We give out regular cost of living increases to offset inflation. We offer PTO for community volunteering and civic duty. We have Centers of Excellence to promote learning. We have a home office benefit to purchase equipment and supplies. We have an Employee Assistance Program (EAP) to connect our staff with the mental health and medical resources they need. I also want to remind you that, as a Resonator, you have quite a few channels for providing feedback to leadership. We have open Q&A at every all-hands meeting; we have an anonymous feedback portal on our SharePoint, and we routinely conduct staff surveys, including the current Organizational Culture Assessment. The CEO also routinely meets with teams across the firm to share updates and answer questions. More to the point, leadership doors are open. In the 15 years, I cannot think of a single instance where I (or any one in leadership) declined a meeting request from a staff member from project assistants on up. Going forward, I encourage you to make use of these venues to provide comments and feedback. I am happy to meet with you to listen to your concerns and discuss further. Steve S.

Explore other reviews about Resonance

5.0
Jun 23, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Company value and ethics are truly what they believe and do - Family atmosphere - Ability to take on different roles and work with colleagues across the company - Great work-life balance and flexibility

Cons

- Not the most diverse company - Little promotion transparency

1.0
May 13, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

RIP due to Doge:/ before then it was Russian roulette to whether you had a chill or sucky manager, You usually worked with several, hopefully you got at least one chill one and one interesting project where you're not a paper pusher. Think of all the awful things about consulting, and then turn it down a notch. Resonance, pre-doge, wasn't nearly as bad as some of the larger consultant firms, less stable, though, too, and didn't match the stress with a higher paycheck

Cons

As stated in other reviews, pay was bad, especially for the industry; the company was bad at promoting internally, turnover was high, especially if you were not mid to upper-level management. The culture gave lip service to work life balance and then expected you, but if you got lucky, you got on a good project with a talented and caring manager, then life was great, but you don't really get to control that Because of the nature of the job, most all the salaries were open info, and there was some sr analyst that analyzed all that data and found that men got paid higher than women even for the same job title, Men were also found to be promoted faster and more likely to be in leadership, despite the majority of the company being female.

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