Propper Daley reviews

3.1

41% would recommend to a friend

(16 total reviews)

56% positive business outlook

Propper Daley has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 16 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Propper Daley employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

16 reviews
1.0
Jan 9, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Except for the associate-level positions (many associates have been underpaid), the pay is fair for the role you have (but not nearly enough for the amount of work you do). Benefits are fine. They have a good PTO policy, but whether or not you'll actually have the time to use it is a different story. No one ever makes you feel bad about taking PTO, which passes the bare minimum, but the amount of work you have to do (and thereby stress you put on yourself) ahead of taking time off and then also catching up on work when you return, easily makes you question if taking time off will be even worth it. (E.g. You want to take 2 days off, but now you're working a 60-hour workweek just to take those 2 days.) Staff is diverse and also come from various professional backgrounds that bring a wealth of different experiences to the team. Interns and contractors are treated relatively well (but employees are not). Notice how most reviews are from interns. Also, they only recently started paying their interns, which speaks to how slow their path to progress is. Especially for a “social impact” agency, you’d think they’d have more progressive values and be leading the charge for things like ensuring even interns are paid for their labor.

Cons

I wish someone had been honest with me or warned me about the job expectations and work culture here before I joined. So this is my warning to you, dear reader: don’t work here unless you like giving up your entire life for your job and constantly feeling like your work is never good enough. I never would've taken this job if I had known what I know now. This job cost me my mental health, and I know I'm not the only one. If you enjoy your time off after 5 pm, peaceful mornings before you start your workday, your weekends, holidays, or any time to yourself, you are infinitely better off finding a different job. The work/life balance here is next to nonexistent because there are absolutely no boundaries with clients. Employees are expected to practically be on-call for their clients. We're not doctors doing life-saving work, but this company acts like we are because of a false sense of urgency the work culture has created. People have a hard time discerning between important v. urgent requests from clients, and so everything is urgent at this company. We bend over backward for our clients, and the people-pleasing work culture this company has for their clients has ultimately created a toxic one for the employees at PD. If a client says jump, we say how high. It doesn't matter if you're currently incapable of jumping or if jumping is an absolutely terrible idea. Clients are also allowed to browbeat and bulldoze PD employees, and upper management will do little to nothing to help or stop it. The attitude is basically "the client is always right," even when they're most definitely wrong. And at what cost? The well-being of PD employees. It's clear that this company does not value its employees if they allow this kind of mistreatment and won't stand up for them. If you're also hoping to grow your career here, you're much more likely to stunt it. There is little to no mentorship from a large majority of managers because everyone is so overworked. There's also a huge lack of trust between departments and coworkers, so a lot of micromanagement happens, making it extremely difficult to grow and advance. I've seen many over-qualified people get placed into associate-level positions and people in manager/director-level positions being micromanaged and not allowed to effectively lead by upper management. It's ironic how they'll hire people to do a job, but then won't trust them to do that exact job that they were hired for. The micromanagement that happens at this company is next level. To give you an idea, I've never worked at a company that reviews your emails before you can send them out, sometimes even internally to other members at PD, not just to clients. It's the perfectionist culture at this company that causes unnecessary scrutinous reviews. Every deliverable is not only reviewed under a microscope, but multiple microscopes, sometimes by people who don’t even need to be involved in the review process. Because of this, you’ll constantly feel like you can’t do anything right and that nothing is ever good enough. I’ve seen many brilliantly confident and more than capable people, myself included, develop imposter syndrome because of what we endure here. And it’s not because we don’t have thick skin. It’s the constant feedback that’s almost always negative, the unnecessary criticism, the perfectionist culture. That all starts to gaslight you no matter how good you are at taking feedback, especially when you encounter it day in and day out, not only from clients, but also at nearly every level internally with the PD team as well. And despite how they like to tout that they're so innovative with change-making ideas, they're actually extremely hesitant to change and even averse to it. So if you think you're going to come to PD and contribute new and exciting ideas and bring them to life, it will most often be an uphill battle. Many people get discouraged from contributing because they've been told "no, that's not the way we do things" one too many times. From what I've seen, based on the people routinely getting promotions, the best way to do well at this job and get promoted is to people-please—do exactly what you're told and don't step out of line in the way things are done, do everything the client wants and when they want it even if you don't have the time or capacity, and work overtime because they glorify people who work long hours. What’s worse is almost everyone at this company sees exactly what’s wrong, talks about how awful things currently are, and knows that things need to change, but then will turn around and continue to drink the kool aid. But hey, that’s how you get promoted here. And then those same toxic behaviors they complained about? They’ll behave the same way towards other people and the people they manage. PD is exactly the kind of place where “you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.” Last but not least, if there's one clear indicator and an absolute red flag about this company, it's that it constantly refers to itself as a family.

1.0
May 12, 2019

Complete frauds

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

coffee on tap, they pay for your parking

Cons

low pay, they fire people on a whim, company culture is bankrupt, staff are HR nightmares, management constantly gaslights employees.

2.0
Apr 8, 2022

To all "change-makers"- change needs to be made NOW.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The staff at Propper Daley are very passionate about the work they do with clients and rightfully so. Although working with so many A-list organizations in the social impact and philanthropy world can be overwhelming and stressful at times, there is a collective mindset within the team that, at the end of the day, the work you're doing is helping people. Additionally, the team here is very diverse. It's really refreshing to be a part of a company that not only champions diversity but also actually makes a point to implement that action into the company. My manager was thoughtful, collaborative, and understanding. They were the main reason for any positive experiences that I had here. However, after having to work with other managers, I think I just got lucky. If you're in an associate position, you can't guarantee what kind of management you get here. Training and guidance for roles really varies, and it's really just the luck of the draw.

Cons

During my first few months at PD, I started noticing how fast and high the turnover rate was here. Employees in all sorts of positions were constantly leaving, while new ones were always being onboarded. At first, I had no idea why. It's not exactly an encouraging thing to see as a new employee. But after spending a bit more time here, it became more and more clear. For a company that prides itself on being "progressive change-makers", they sure don't apply that mindset to their own employees. The staff at Propper Daley is extremely overworked and understaffed. We are always expected to have all the answers for our clients, often with little to no guidance from upper management. Interns and fellows are especially left in the dark depending on who they get as a manager and are often underpaid for the amount of work they have to take on. There is very little regard from upper management to make sure interns and fellows are actually being paid for their work on time and are learning from their experience, which is something PD explicitly promises in applications and program descriptions. The team at PD loves to put on a "big happy family" vibe- but it's all a front. As a previous review has stated, there are no boundaries between employees and clients. There is NO work/life balance whatsoever. The hyper-perfectionist culture at PD only destroys the potential for the work we do to be great. They love and reward people who say "yes", as if "no" is not an acceptable answer. People here are miserable and drowning in work, but are pressured to keep burning themselves out because they are told their work is seemingly "changing the world". I had an issue with a client that deeply affected my mental health, and nobody on my team seemed to care because they always prioritize the client over the employee. Every single time. Employees get no support. Obviously, the work we do here is important- but NOT at the cost of any employee's health or wellbeing. To the upper management at PD: if you care so much about mental health, maybe you should enforce that within your own company's culture.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 16 Reviews

Glassdoor has 24 Propper Daley reviews submitted anonymously by Propper Daley employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Propper Daley is right for you.