A HUGE Disappointment! - Anonymous employee TouchTunes Employee Review

2.0
Oct 19, 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice location in Mid-town Manhattan. Casual business dress and jeans optional any day. Executive management doesn't seem to worry about the staff completing a normal 8 hour workday.

Cons

Where do I start.... Too many Chiefs and not enough Indians. As a lower level employee you were simply there to execute what you were told and not have any ideas of your own. It was very rare, to have any ideas by the junior staff brought to fruition, however, if you did not contribute ideas, it reflected badly against you. Countless hours were wasted "brainstorming" ideas or trying to be proactive only to be told, "No, that's not how we do things here". Plus, if a junior staff did come up with a great idea, it was then turned over to executive management to "revise or refine" which basically meant that the idea was completely changed. So eventual the junior staff would leave. There was a high turnover rate and anyone continuing to work there felt they were in a dismal environment. There seemed to be little recognition that overall, the company provides a powerful consumer product via the sale of MUSIC at a jukebox. They constantly focused on their customer base, who sold the jukeboxes, but little was done to market to the end user, who ultimately has to buy the music in order to make the company profitable. The marketing team was bogged down by TWO old school executives, with no clear definition on each of their roles and the constant disagreements on how to market. Along with needing to have COMPLETE authority on all marketing projects, there was always a bottleneck to get things finalized. It was ridiculously disturbing that they defined EVERY minute detail of anything that had to be done, right down to arguments about a shade of purple in a advertisement, or a font type, or a comma in a sentence, or a hyphen for a word. Ad sales suffered because management believed in trying to catch only the big fish, which was virtually impossible with barely any brand recognition for the TouchTunes product and executive management was doing nothing to pay attention. The creative team, which was brilliant with their innovative ideas and great designs was often forced to change things at the demand of executives, who believed they had a better "eye" for good design. There was little trust between executive management and junior staff members, most of which had great forward thinking ideas and could bring the company into a new era of music entertainment, if the old school style of thinking was put to rest and the fresher generation was allowed to actually give their ideas a chance. Also, there were virtually no processes in place, no controls when it came to signing off on projects and a great deal of wasteful spending.

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TouchTunes Response
8y
Thanks for your feedback. I am sorry your time at TouchTunes was a disappointment, I hope you are enjoying your next role more, as life it too short. This review is from almost 2 years ago, so I think it would be helpful to share the NYC office results from our more recent anonymous employee poll from March 2018. Overall, I am pleased that the vast majority of the team here is happy working at TouchTunes. A few highlights: -95% of employees said their job was important to accomplishing the mission of the organization -94% said their manager was approachable and available -92% said their job gave them a sense of personal satisfaction -92% said they are always treated with respect while they are at work -87% said that employees are held accountable for achieving goals However, that doesn’t mean we can’t improve. That same poll had only 71% of employees saying that we clearly communicate our strategies and goals, so we have some work to do there. With all that said, overall I feel good about both the team and the work environment we have in the New York office, and TouchTunes overall.

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Pros

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Cons

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Cons

- Toxic Leadership Culture: Incompetent, egotistical, and narcissistic management that fosters fear rather than collaboration. - Zero Upward Mobility: No clear career paths or growth opportunities; promotions and recognition are rare or politically driven. - Miserable Work Environment: Employees, especially those who’ve been there long-term, appear burned out, disengaged, and deeply unhappy. - Soul-Sucking Atmosphere: The energy is heavy, draining, and creatively stifling — it feels like survival, not inspiration. - Widespread Negativity: Teams spend more time gossiping, complaining, or blaming others than actually collaborating or problem-solving. - Divisive Leadership: Leadership preaches values like inclusion and teamwork but acts in the opposite way — creating silos and favoritism. - HR Complicity: HR prioritizes protecting toxic management over supporting employee well-being or addressing serious workplace issues. - Culture of Fear and Bullying: Bullies are rewarded and thrive in the environment, while kind, collaborative, and talented people often leave. - Lack of Accountability: Poor performers in leadership roles face no consequences; bad behavior is normalized. - Hypocritical “Culture” Messaging: Company values are used as PR slogans, not guiding principles — nothing authentic about the “people-first” narrative. - Rampant Discrimination: Racism, Islamophobia, and other forms of bias are openly tolerated or ignored by leadership — creating a hostile environment for anyone outside the “inner circle.” -Declining Business & Outdated Product: Revenue continues to fall because the product is irrelevant in a changing economy — especially during a recession. Leadership refuses to innovate or face reality. - Overall Dysfunction: The company is a case study in how not to run a business — a revolving door of talent, crumbling morale, and no vision for the future.

5
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