employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Liquid Interactive

Is this your company?

Great company - Anonymous employee Liquid Interactive Employee Review

4.0
Apr 12, 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working on great, impactful projects for variety of clients. Great team.

Cons

Not too many benefits included

avatar
Liquid Interactive Response
3y
Thank you for this review! We are glad you enjoyed the projects you worked on and collaborating with your team members while you worked at Liquid. However, we are sorry to hear that you felt we did not offer many benefits. I am not sure when you worked at Liquid, but in the last two years alone, we have made significant enhancements to the benefits we provide our employees. That list now includes but isn't limited to: • Comprehensive health, dental, and vision insurance • Life, long-term and short-term disability insurance • Flexible spending account (FSA) • 401k with automatic company contribution • Work from home/Hybrid work model • Paid Parental Leave • 4 weeks of PTO for new employees. Up to 6 weeks PTO with seniority • Sick Time provided with no preset limit. Team members do not have to utilize any of their PTO when they are sick • Training/education budget provided to each employee • Quarterly givebacks in which Liquid and the team have the opportunity to support the communities we're part of • In-person and hybrid company-wide events; monthly "Cake Days" to celebrate birthdays, anniversaries, and accomplishments; and many more opportunities for team bonding and recognition Thank you, Mark Cernese, Chief Financial Officer

Explore other reviews about Liquid Interactive

5.0
Dec 13, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good benefits, fair compensation, transparent leadership.

Cons

No cons come to mind.

2.0
Jan 6, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fully remote, Good PTO, Casual environment

Cons

The fundamental problem at Liquid is favoritism. The entire senior management level under executive leadership is a group of close friends, and that friendship circle extends into executive leadership. This would be fine, but people that aren't in the circle don't get promoted to senior management. Even if they have more experience. Even if they are more qualified for those particular roles. So, people in the circle are continuously promoted, while top performers are not. They are inexplicably put into roles that aren't aligned with their skills, just to keep the friends at the same level. This is obviously unfair to others in the organization. To make it worse, one of the managers is a real problem when it comes to respecting his teammates and direct reports. Leadership is painfully aware, but he is in the circle so he doesn't receive any real consequences. No matter what department you're in, if you don't bend to his will, you will be forced out sooner or later. If you try to address these problems with leadership, you don't last long there. You are listened to, and there is talk that it will be corrected, but the right kind of change doesn't happen. Good people are let go. It's not good for clients or for the agency.

1
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All