Pros
great compensation and perks, interesting work, autonomy and growth potential. "work hard and go home" philosophy, very family friendly, and lots of remote workers.
Cons
If you're not the kind of person that needs things to be perfect, or has to know everything before you start, you will have a hard time. Everyone is more than willing to help, but you need to raise your hand.
Pros
Transparent and honest leadership: The executive team is extremely transparent and direct with employees. Communication is clear, and you consistently feel like you’re getting the full story, not filtered messaging. People-first culture: BlueModus genuinely cares about its employees. Leadership is approachable, supportive, and makes an effort to ensure people feel valued as individuals, not just resources. Meaningful client impact: After working in agency environments for 20+ years, this is one of the few places where I truly felt like the work made a real difference for clients. The team is focused on helping organizations succeed in an authentic way, not just “delivering a project.” Strong remote culture and employee connection: For a 100% remote agency, BlueModus does a great job creating connection across the organization. They invest in team-building and collaboration, and the annual all-company in-person meeting (hosted in a different U.S. location each year) is a highlight and reinforces the culture.
Cons
Uncertainty due to rapid AI disruption: Like many digital agencies right now, AI is creating a lot of change and uncertainty. Success increasingly depends on being adaptable and continuously learning beyond your core job responsibilities. If you aren’t expanding your skill set, it’s easy to fall behind as priorities shift. Limited upward mobility due to company size: BlueModus is a smaller organization, so internal advancement opportunities can be limited. Career growth often requires taking on broader responsibilities rather than moving into formally defined higher-level roles.
Pros
- Some great people on the front lines actual work - Decent support from IT staff (minimal staff, but nice and effective) - Full time remote work - Challenging
Cons
There were lot of cons working for this company, and it didn't take long for me to regret joining them. They were nothing like they portrayed themselves to be on their website or the face they put out in the interview process. Management and culture: The company talks a lot about being a family and supporting employees, but that was not my experience. In reality, there is a small inner circle with clear influence, and if you are not part of it, you will feel it. Relationship-building outside that group seemed discouraged. There was also a noticeable culture of gossip and politics, including people in leadership-adjacent roles who did not contribute much to client work but still had outsized influence. Support and accountability: Managerial support was very weak. If you had a difficult or abusive client, you were expected to deal with it alone. Standing up for yourself was often treated as the problem. Employees were regularly dropped into projects that were already failing and then blamed for issues that had existed long before they arrived. There was a constant mismatch between what leadership said they wanted and what they actually rewarded. Visibility mattered more than consistency or competence. Compensation and advancement: Pay was below market for tech/developers, especially considering the workload and expectations. Bonuses were small and not particularly motivating. Stock options or meaningful ownership opportunities did not seem to be part of the equation unless you were already at the top. The company felt much more secure for people who had been there from the beginning or had titles like Director, VP, or Chief. Work environment: The day to day environment was noisy and highly interrupt-driven. Slack was a constant distraction, and there was pressure to always be active and responsive even when trying to complete focused client work. At the same time, employees were expected to remain fully billable, which often meant working extra hours just to make up for lost time. The technology stack was not especially advanced, and a lot of the work did not feel like it built long-term skills or career growth. Leadership and morale: There was a lot of ego, posturing, and uneven standards in leadership. Upper management seemed heavily focused on socializing and vacations, while employees outside the inner circle were better off keeping a low profile. Morale overall seemed low, even if people tried to act otherwise. The company appeared to grow quickly after big layoffs from the pandemic, and now to go through layoffs again, which raises serious concerns about stability and leadership’s ability to scale responsibly in a way that supports employees as well as just protecting the owner’s interests. Benefits: The health insurance was poor. Routine care was manageable, but anything beyond basic checkups came with very high out of pocket costs. Overall: This is not a company I would recommend to someone looking for stability, strong leadership, fair compensation, or meaningful technical growth. Unless you are in the inner circle or already hold a leadership title, it is difficult to feel supported or secure here.
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