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Musiker Discovery Programs

Engaged employer

Avoid - Anonymous employee Musiker Discovery Programs Employee Review

1.0
Nov 22, 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some people seem to have stayed there for multiple years and really enjoy the ability to be on campus and have a relaxed fall season after the summer ends. But from what I saw, most people burn out there in under 2 years if they're even retained that long. Other than the remote work benefit, can't think of any other positives to my time there. You'll learn a lot, since everyone there is working multiple jobs at all times.

Cons

- Complete lack of trust, training, support from management, coupled with an inability to communicate - Lack of coordination across departments - Constant employee turnover - Large work loads with minimal support

Explore other reviews about Musiker Discovery Programs

5.0
Sep 10, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great team to work with

Cons

can be overwhelming at times

1.0
May 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Employees were often deeply committed to student experience, innovation, and client relationships despite operational challenges stemming from leadership and management structures. The work itself could be meaningful and collaborative at the team level.

Cons

The organization frequently described itself as agile and innovative, but in practice, innovation often appeared welcome only when aligned with pre-existing leadership assumptions. Employees who raised alternative strategies, operational concerns, or differing perspectives sometimes appeared to experience marginalization rather than meaningful engagement. Over time, I observed a pattern in which long-tenured employees, higher-salaried staff, and employees balancing caregiving responsibilities for children or elderly parents often seemed to face greater instability during recurring end-of-summer restructurings and operational shifts. The resulting environment created a perception that no position was truly stable year over year. Whether intentional or not, this contributed to a broader perception that institutional knowledge, sustainable work-life balance, and long-term employee investment were undervalued by portions of senior leadership and operational management.

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