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Affinity Development Group

Engaged employer

Good Grief - Promotions Specialist Affinity Development Group Employee Review

2.0
May 23, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great benefits, causal atmosphere, some opportunity for advancement.

Cons

Based on their bottom line, they will terminate you no matter how long you've been with the company. 8 years, 10 years, bye-bye, but we'll keep temps on that we hired yesterday. This company has no conscience. Don't be fooled by the smoke and mirrors.

Explore other reviews about Affinity Development Group

5.0
Dec 9, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good benefits, company culture, and coworkers

Cons

I have nothing bad to say

3.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong company mission and member-focused values A company and mission I was genuinely proud to represent Some opportunities for long-term career growth and professional development Ability to make a positive impact and contribute nationally and internationally

Cons

My experience changed significantly during my final years under new leadership. The environment shifted from collaboration and support to one driven by control, inconsistency, and image management. Communication expectations became unclear and frequently changed, despite communication having previously been recognized as one of my professional strengths. After years of positive performance and no disciplinary history, I experienced repeated write-ups tied to assumptions, shifting standards, and reactive management rather than constructive leadership. In the end, micromanagement replaced autonomy. Questions were often met with assumptions instead of curiosity or follow-up conversation. New ideas and process improvements were commonly dismissed with resistance to change rather than evaluated on merit. Recognition for work and accomplishments was limited, while accountability often felt selective. What concerned me most was a leadership style that appeared more focused on managing perception upward than supporting and developing employees downward. Decisions sometimes prioritized appearances over collaboration, and employees with valuable experience or differing perspectives could feel dismissed rather than heard. In some situations, I was encouraged to redirect responsibility toward clients for internal decisions, which conflicted with the accountability and service standards I had spent years building my reputation around. A healthy workplace is built on trust, clarity, mutual respect, and psychological safety. In my experience, those qualities became increasingly difficult to find during my final years.

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