Typical agency; high stress, high turn over, lots of perks - Anonymous employee Verndale Employee Review

1.0
Apr 26, 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-The pay, perks and benefits are the best aspects. Great health, life, vision and dental insurance, health deductible is covered by the company. Snacks and drinks are usually in stock. Free lunch every last day of the week (i.e. usually Friday) and when the rest of the city is in a state of emergency but the office is still open and people are required to work (i.e. snow storms). -Some dogs in the office are calming (others are more distracting). -The office will sometimes do pot-lucks or BBQs. -It's a typical agency; high stress, high turn over, lots of perks to try and make up for it. You work with a wide range of clients (mostly enterprise level). As far as the work produced it is extremely complicated but takes multiple attempts to get it right. A good company for people that want to spend their free time at work and/or with co-workers.

Cons

-Difficult to focus due to the open floor plan and other people's conversations, phone calls, ad hoc meetings, bantering, dogs, people playing with or yelling at dogs and people with loud headphones. -Some good ideas from the executives but poor application and they ultimately get abandoned or changed in a couple months. The mentality is that the next tool or software will fix all the problems at the company and while implementing and defining the process new issues are found. -The common areas in the Boston office are filthy, people don't clean up after themselves. Lots of stains in the rugs from dog urine or people just not cleaning their spills. Fruit flies and ants get to be a problem when people store food at their desks. The refrigerator is often full of molding food because people don't throw out their leftovers/old lunches. Water, coffee, popcorn and other food dispensers are rarely cleaned so there's usually a film on these but they remain in use. -The office is dated but has some updated/modern areas. Dogs and people will walk by and the floor/monitors will shake. The fire alarm has been known to go off for no reason. The building is in an area with garbage all over the streets. The area is supposedly "up and coming" so there's a fair amount of construction taking place in the neighborhood but ultimately it's a dated and dirty building that isn't maintained. -Unless you're a department manager employees need to find on-street parking. Cars left overnight are frequently broken into. The streets around the building are always covered with broken glass from car windows. Employee cars are often towed due to street cleaning. Parking in the winter is extremely difficult as the sidewalks and roads are covered in snow. Sidewalks in the area are usually not shoveled meaning people are forced to walk in the road. -A good allegory for the company is that there are 4 "employee parking" spots in the lot and the partners (who own the building/lot) take up 2 of them every day. There's an illusion of incentive and reward but ultimately the comfort/development of the employee is not a priority. That being said there is an official incentive program that rewards working late/extra billable work, basically if you work an additional 20 billable hours you get a $100 gift card. -There is a volunteer initiative where people can give back to the community. Sounds great except people are required to make up the volunteer hours to hit their billable target for the week. -The sales process is "just to get to the table" so estimates are too low given the company's overhead and process. Projects are usually undersold to end up impacting timeline and scope down the road. -For a company that usually has 3+ dogs in the office every day there is a lot of food lying around. One dog was hospitalized due to eating things off the floor. Larger dogs can eat out of the smaller trash cans that are on the floor. -Project managers are expected to work 50+ hours and weekends. Working on weekends is the primary way of getting recognition for anyone. People usually have to work extra hours because the projects are poorly defined or undersold and cannot be fixed/billed on normal time. -Processes change too frequently to accurately define what/who is needed for a project and how it will progress. Each department has their own way of doing things and will break from any semblance of a standardized process. -People aren't usually treated as individuals but rather as replaceable resources. These resources are swapped on projects as needed resulting in momentum and knowledge loss. Outside of the technology departments there is little concern about people's personal development and training is minimal; it's basically sink or swim. -All that being said if you do work the 50+ hours a week and get along with management employees can be promoted extremely quickly.

Explore other reviews about Verndale

5.0
Mar 28, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I am always learning and growing and bettering myself here, as Verndale nurtures its employees. Great environment, great people. The owner and leadership team are as transparent as they can be with company information, upcoming changes, trends, et cetera. I work with the most excellent Marketing Services team and we have a lot of great clients that make the job so rewarding.

Cons

Often, there are back-to-back meetings; context switching is hard, but it is inevitable at an agency.

1
1.0
Feb 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Some colleagues are knowledgeable and willing to help. - Fully remote work.

Cons

I regret accepting this role. In my experience the company fosters an environment of heavy micromanagement and persistent pressure to meet billable hour quotas. Managers expect near immediate responses to Slack messages, which forces frequent context switching and makes deep focused work nearly impossible. Deadlines are short and the expectation of 8 billable hours per day is enforced strictly. PTO and professional development are effectively penalized because they reduce billable time. There is also an unusual expectation that employees must proactively post in a Slack channel when they are low on work and then solicit assignments. This shifts the responsibility for finding billable work onto individual contributors while they are still held accountable for meeting quotas. When meaningful work is not available, employees can be reprimanded for not meeting targets despite having followed the company’s process for requesting assignments. Meetings are frequent and often lack clear outcomes while managers closely monitor day to day tasks. I observed abrupt terminations with limited feedback provided to affected employees. The combination of micromanagement, unclear expectations, and punitive treatment of PTO contributed to high stress and turnover. The role negatively affected my mental health, and I left when a better opportunity arose. If you value uninterrupted focus time, transparent policies about billable hours and PTO, and clear support for professional growth, ask specific questions in interviews about response-time expectations, how billable work is assigned, and how PTO is treated.

6
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