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Geek Powered Studios

Engaged employer

A Sinking Ship - Anonymous employee Geek Powered Studios Employee Review

1.0
May 20, 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You work with some really great people and some of them might end up being your good friends. You meet dedicated employees who are incredibly talented and do amazing work. There’s the typical start up feel with nerf guns and a lot of potlucks. You get to work on a wide variety of projects in many different industries. You build skills quickly and out of necessity. There is a huge workload for a very small number of people and you have to adapt quickly! This place lets you see your full potential and how it can be used elsewhere. A few former employees have gone on to do side projects or start new careers where they are happy because this place taught them what they didn’t want in a new employer or career.

Cons

TL;DR: Unprofessional, No Trust, Condescending, Immature, Micromanagement The best way I can summarize Geek Powered Studios is as an abusive partner. They make you feel like less of a person when you don’t agree in full with their shoddy methodology, loose morals, or even when you have a slightly different opinion on anything that doesn’t align with their views/values. When you’ve gotten to your witts end and want to leave the company they tell you what you want to hear and make a lot of promises to bring you back in. Promises that are rarely kept and obviously aren’t thought out. It’s a cycle that I’ve seen over and over again involving myself and my co-workers over the span of my employment. It’s also how they have almost completely abolished any shred of diversity. Geek Powered Studios is one of the most unprofessional places I have ever worked. The way management conducts themselves is abhorrent. Upper management will often use derogatory and offensive language when they are upset and speaking about clients, employees, ex-employees, potential clients, and potential employees. They also allow clients to treat employees very poorly, in once case allowing the entire company to be blackmailed during a company wide phone call. The CEO and upper management pride themselves on “tests” that they impress on their employees. These “tests” are not used for benchmarking, to assess skill level, or to help provide career pathing, they are simply a way for management to stroke their egos about how dedicated you are or are not to the company in their opinion. Management itself gets very little training on interpersonal skills, time management, delegation, and other basic managerial traits. In the training meetings that I have seen, management sets the tone by mocking the training, making jokes, arguing that the presenter is wrong, or completely bowing out and working during presentations instead of participating or at least paying attention. Trust isn’t something you earn by the caliber of your work it’s something obtained by being friends and socializing outside of the office with upper management. Upper management themselves, in a company wide meeting, chastised employees who did not thank a manager for bringing cupcakes, that they had another employee bring in for them and for not participating in a brunch with the CEO and his wife on a Sunday morning. They openly stated that those who didn’t participate wouldn’t be heard as loudly and that those who did participate would have the upper hand when it came to their concerns being addressed. Management is horrible about recognizing or rewarding employees for good work. Management often blames their employees for their shortcomings. The CEO buys program after program to monitor employee moral and when he doesn’t get the numbers back that he hopes for, he blames the employees and buys a new gauge for moral. In a company wide meeting he once printed out feedback and asked us if we were “trolling” him. I could go on and on about the low points of this company but I feel as if the numbers speak for themselves. In the span of a few months Geek Powered Studios has had eight employees leave, either because they were terminated or left of their own accord. Of those eight, seven were female. The CEO in a quarterly presentation promised that when the company reached fifteen employees that an HR manager would be brought on board to help with the cultural rifts and career pathing issues that came up time and time again. That HR person was not hired until seven people were gone in the span of two months.

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5.0
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Pros

Unlimited pto and good co workers

Cons

Nothing specific to them. Only “con” is that working at a agency can be a hassle but that’s just the nature of it

5.0
Oct 29, 2023
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Pros

1. Supportive Team Environment: The team is not just friendly; they genuinely look out for each other, ensuring everyone succeeds. 2. Smooth Onboarding: The transition into the company is seamless, making newcomers feel welcome and well-informed from day one. 3. Excellent Communication: The team excels in clear and effective communication, ensuring everyone is aligned and informed. 4. Continuous Learning: There's a strong emphasis on personal and professional growth, with team members regularly sharing insights and knowledge. 5. Trust and Autonomy: Employees are trusted to take charge of their roles and deliver results, fostering a sense of ownership and pride in one's work.

Cons

1. Fast-Paced Environment: The team moves quickly, so staying proactive in communication is crucial since official check-ins are limited to 1-2 times a week. 2. Heavy Workload: The workload can be intense, but it offers a steep learning curve and rapid growth opportunities. 3. No Room for Excuses: While the company values accountability and doesn't entertain excuses, they do offer grace and understanding when approached with honesty.

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