Great place for new those new to industry - Intern Marketing Ripen Employee Review

4.0
Mar 19, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You learn a lot within the first few weeks of working there, however it does seem like the education bottlenecks eventually. It was also great that there was a lot of freedom with making your own projects to work on when you had finished your everyday tasks. On a more fun note: there is a ping pong table if you are into that daily snacks that that are always a great surprise there are fun events like Halloween costume contests even yoga classes to destress

Cons

Interns seem to get lost in the hustle and bustle once they get settled.

Explore other reviews about Ripen

5.0
Mar 29, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture, acceptance, freedom to grow.

Cons

Agency life can be stressful

4.0
Jun 3, 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

One of the best day-to-day office and agency cultures, period. Beautiful office always stocked with food, new tech, and in-office perks. Close access to awesome Princeton lunch spots, shopping, etc. Some of the best parties and company events you will ever attend. Interesting mix of deliverables -- websites, direct mail, eblasts, video, catalogs, banners, long-form, you name it. Mostly fun and nice people, very few egomaniacs. Very reasonable hours with rare late nights on a predictable seasonal schedule. Permissive atmosphere, you dont have to pretend to be some stereotype of a "professional". The owners are genuinely good human beings who care about the clients, the company, and everyone in it.

Cons

Ripen is a small agency, so you have to where a lot of hats. The pay and benefits are OK but you may be underwhelmed by insurance coverage or available PTOs. Large amount of work is for one or two clients, which is both risky and can burn out the creative production people. Owners will always listen to anyone but really only make changes based on the input of one or two people who have their ear. Employee time is very heavily and overly scrutinized, especially for production. Limited room for advancement beyond mid-level roles..

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