Great company to work for - Art Manager Envar Entertainment Employee Review

5.0
Dec 6, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great company culture and super talented and driven coworkers. Still going strong considering how difficult it is to survive in the industry nowadays.

Cons

Client feedback can be a bit confusing at times, but producers do their best to make it all clear to everyone.

Explore other reviews about Envar Entertainment

4.0
Aug 15, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Competitive salary, collaborative team, pleasant work environment, real growth opportunities, and extensive resources for training and learning.

Cons

I haven’t identified any significant negative points so far.

2.0
Oct 13, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Impressive Clientele list for resume booster: Riot, Blizzard, Tencent, Epic Games, etc. Hand on learning Talented art directors and artist to learn and improve artistic craft. Passionate artists and kind project managers to work with Pending on projects, you can get a sense of a great community. Met some of the best and kindest people at this company.

Cons

Work-Life Balance Delivery timelines are often compressed, requiring consistent overtime to meet project needs. Multiple artists have reported being denied time off due to production demands, resulting in burnout and, in some cases, emotional breakdowns during calls. Payment Delays Payments are frequently delayed. If accounting misses a processing cycle, invoices are automatically pushed into the next month. In my own experience, this led to a four-month delay; equivalent to an entire fiscal quarter without compensation. Leadership Gaps Junior leadership would benefit from mentorship in long-term planning, professional communication, empathy, procedural documentation, and artist scheduling. There is a lack of accountability and self-reflection within leadership, which limits growth and adaptation; it is always someone else's fault. The CEO in particular would benefit from development in soft skills, strategic management, and trust-building. I have witnessed and personally experienced communication that was unprofessional and emotionally harmful rather than motivating. Examples include personal attacks on character, expressions of disappointment in place of constructive feedback, lashing out, lack of empathy for burnout, silent treatment, and avoidance of accountability. Role Scope and Expectations Artists are routinely assigned responsibilities beyond their current skill scope, which results in excessive overtime, unrealistic expectations, and subsequent burnout. For example: junior artists are expected to deliver mid-level quality, mids are treated as seniors, and seniors are expected to operate as leads without pay adjustment. Talented artists are often driven to exhaustion, pushed to deliver until they burn out, and then criticized when performance drops. Many have left feeling undervalued and emotionally depleted and jaded towards Envar. It is not uncommon for artists joining my projects to break down in tears due to fear of disappointing leadership or being terminated. When these issues are raised, there is consistent resistance to change. Ultimately, this environment and the behavior of the CEO led me to resign. I could not, in good conscience, continue working for a company that prioritizes output over the well-being of its artists. Envar has significant potential, but a shift in leadership and culture is needed to truly set the team up for sustainable success.

6
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