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S9 Architecture

Is this your company?

DO NOT WORK THERE! - Anonymous employee S9 Architecture Employee Review

1.0
May 13, 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I can't think of any.

Cons

If you care about your mental health and over all well being, DO NOT EVEN CONSIDER an interview there! 1. they will lie in the interview so that is the first step messing with your mental health. People left because of their mental health in jeopardy 2. the office culture is horrendous and worse I have ever seen. This will never change because it comes from all of leadership. And don't listen to the second in command, he is very two faced. 3. I have never seen such a turnaround of employees like with this firm. After the HR person left, the one hired after that left after 3 months and it took another few months to find one, the CFO quit right after that. Oh, HR is never going to advocate for you because she has to do what leadership tells her whether it's right or wrong for the employee. This is why no one stays because most people can't live with treating people unjustly. 4. PTO sucks especially with their terrible policy of making you take the week of Christmas for them to close the office whether you have PTO or not so you basically own 12 days AND that includes sick days. There is absolutely no flexibility to work from home either 5. Don't expect common courtesies and kindness. Be shocked if you get a "good morning" or "how are you". 6. Pray not to get Covid because you don't get to work from home and you have to take it as PTO. Their handling of the pandemic with their staff is totally reckless and selfish. Also, if you were in contact with someone who contracted Covid, then you don't get time off to go get tested, not even half an hour, you have to take that as well as the time waiting for the results as PTO 7. Most of leadership is rude, nasty and acts like everyone is not good enough. They yell, demean, talk down to and treat you without any importance. All men in leadership with no promotion of women nor even helping to build them. They are misogynists and disrespectful and that would never change. Absolutely no equity. There have been so many complaints about the design principal and how he treats people, and yet they make excuses for him instead of taking actions to make it better for everyone 7. Expect to be super micromanaged and late late late hours because of deadlines which somehow they can never keep up with. 8. YES, they write their own reviews on here! 9. The people who are still there are either planning to leave or are the ones who don't hold themselves to a higher standard so they accept the crap 10. They do NOTHING for their employees. No mentoring, team building, social events, nothing. 11. Yearly evaluations are done by you only for them to berate you and make you feel like you don't deserve credit. They do this to so many people. This is so that they have an excuse to not give you a raise and give you a crappy bonus (well unless they like you, then you get a good bonus even if you are there less time than many others) 12. They are very sneaky and not trustworthy. You can't hold them to their word 13. No work/life balance for most of the staff who spend many long hours working even after they are home

Explore other reviews about S9 Architecture

5.0
Apr 26, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Exciting projects and great co-workers/ studio culture

Cons

Sometimes the hours are extremely demanding

1
2.0
Mar 28, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Junior staff are all wonderful people and extremely talented. Pay is decent. Work life balance.

Cons

TLDR: leadership is a trainwreck, project managers are overworked, communication within design teams is substandard, design principal is egotistical and micromanages, disorganized, plays favorites, no sense of team or collaboration, archaic policies, and there is no flexibility or culture for employees whatsoever. Read on for further explanation of a few of these points. 1. Leadership/Management. - Project managers are completely overwhelmed and don't have time to properly help their staff. You will be spending a lot of time teaching yourself how to do things. - there is a lot of internal conflict/head-butting between higher ups, which makes it very difficult to perform your tasks as a designer. I didn't know who to go to most of the time because the design principal would tell me NOT to go to my project manager, behind her back. Very toxic and unhealthy behavior for higher ups and puts me in an uncomfortable position. - The design principal is notoriously a nightmare to work with and impossible to please. He does not know how to prioritize tasks or follow timelines which leads to a lot of weight on your shoulders nearing the end of a deadline. He has no patience, does not listen, interrupts you any time you try to voice your opinion, gets angry and passive aggressive easily depending on his mood that day, changes his mind on a whim, and breathes down your neck when you're trying to work. He's not a terrible person, but that doesn't excuse his behavior - he's an absolute disaster to work with and I cannot express enough how much of a hinderance that is when trying to learn and grow as a designer. - The design principal is also notorious for inappropriate behavior. It seems like he enjoys trying to turn young designers against each other and making them compete against one another. He brings designers into conference rooms for private one-on-one's quite regularly and will talk poorly of your colleagues and spread rumors about them, honestly I think out of boredom. There was one time he brought me in because he noticed I was less motivated, I thought we had a productive talk, but next day comes I'm out sick with a fever and he brings my coworker into a conference room and complains to her that I'm faking illness to avoid him, and not only did he break the confidentiality of our talk, he twisted all of my words when I was vulnerable and honest with him. I felt completely and utterly betrayed, and it's unfathomable that this is accepted behavior for a principal. - the firm will also play favorites and give special perks such as extra pay, PTO, and wfh flexibility, to said favorites under the table. If they didn't hide it, that would be less of an issue - but the fact that they do it secretly, is very suspicious and reinforces how little this firm values transparency and collaboration. 2. Zero Flexibility - Please note that there are no sick days - you must take PTO when you're not feeling well, and you are required to use 4 days of your PTO during Christmas week. You are not allowed to work from home, ever, even when you are on the mend from an illness but still in that contagious zone. They will make you either come into office or take PTO. So really, your recreational PTO is very minimal. And most people choose to come into the office sick rather than use PTO - it's incredibly unhealthy and puts others at risk. Illness spreads across the office like crazy throughout the year. - You are also forced to use PTO for doctor's appointments, etc., rather than being able to make up the time later. One time my coworker fainted in the bathroom and was forced to use PTO for that time lost. When my back spasmed on my way to work and I had to take an ambulance to the ER, I was forced to use PTO that day, rather than allowing us an opportunity to make up the time. This place nickels and dimes and is so rigid without consideration that we are actual human beings. 3. No Culture - There is no sense of team or family at S9 as a studio. They consider monthly design pinups "culture" but it's really more like lectures with snacks and beer. It's nice to have, but it doesn't add any culture when we are all sitting there in silence listening to presentations. Even the design principal understands that there needs to be more fun activities in the office - but the founding principal insists everything be educational. The office is incredibly stiff, and employee happiness is definitely not prioritized the way it should be. I wish they would learn that happy employees = more productive work and employees will be more willing to go the extra mile. I have tried to make a difference in culture by befriending people and bringing in board games to play during lunch, but that effort was not seen or valued by leadership. I'm afraid they are just stuck in their ways. When I say that no one is happy here, I mean, NO ONE is happy here. Some people are comfortable, and that is ok - but no one is genuinely happy, not even the higher ups. Most designers are quite miserable, and the turnover rate is extremely high due to not being able to work with the design principal. Be prepared to read a lot of farewell emails if you do decide to work here. Tech people seem to have a more stable experience, though, so if you're going into technical you might be ok and find a comfortable position. But if you are a designer, I would never in a million years, not even for money, recommend S9 as it is currently.

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