Good Experience for the Resume, HR Nightmare - Account Executive Touchdown PR Employee Review

2.0
Jun 25, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- A place to learn the basics of tech PR, gain skills and confidence - One-on-one, some of the management there tries to be understanding and care about your wellbeing - Vacation days

Cons

- Workload is above average, even for agencies, in part because of rampant micromanagement and certain managerial styles creating more work for everybody. - They were very weird about enforcing a strict "hybrid" model for those located in the city of the office, even though they have remote employees and their parent company operated remotely. - Managers often don't have managerial skills. For some reason, they are not screened for the necessary managerial skills when hired or promoted (which are not the same thing as PR skills). - Touchdown PR was an HR Nightmare when I was there, and still is from what I've heard since I left. There is a deeply troubling culture of scrutiny. For example, in upper management meetings, specific managers will decide something about your work is a "problem" and then you suffer the price for it. You may be called into a manager meeting to "see what's going on," and then you have to reveal the personal details of your situation or whatever is affecting your work. However much you share, that information is then somehow guaranteed to eventually be shared with the entire company, health information or not. - I witnessed microaggressions in every direction (race, weight and age), nepotist attitudes leaning in favor of men, and a hugely normalized gossip culture that was completely exhausting when I was there. Half of the leadership's jobs seem to be taking complaints and trying to rally the complainer to continue to work with hard to work with people.

Explore other reviews about Touchdown PR

5.0
Feb 9, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has really great synergy, which can go a long way in your day-to-day and long-term career... seriously. There's obvious/transparent growth potential with review cycles in the spring and fall. Healthy support from the executives down to middle management. GREAT co-workers. Hybrid work, or remote based on where you are (US HQ is in Austin; UK in Basingstoke). They train you really well on the ins and outs of PR, tech, and the business industry/markets at large. Very supportive of work-life balance (I've been slapped on the wrist a few times for working overtime). REALLY good PTO. There are 2-3 company-wide check-ins per week with weekly kickoffs, trivia, and company shoutouts, which makes the company feel close. Lots of opportunities to learn and attend outside media panels. The company now has a yearly wellbeing stipend. Overall, a great work experience and a great entry into PR!

Cons

The pay is pretty dismal, not going to lie... It could be worth it to cut your teeth and get into PR, but it's definitely not for the money. I know employees who have gotten second jobs and others who have sold their plasma to make ends meet... yikes. Definitely a low on diversity. There are also ebbs and flows with workload where you feel like there's nothing to do and then many times where you feel like there's way too much to do.

2.0
Oct 28, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- You’ll learn a lot quickly and gain solid foundational PR experience. - Opportunity to build media relationships with well-known outlets. - A few genuinely kind and talented coworkers who try to support each other despite the culture.

Cons

Micromanagement is constant, and junior employees are overloaded with unrealistic expectations and impossible deadlines. The rules are inconsistent, favoritism is blatant, and speaking up about unfair treatment often backfires. Some managers are unprofessional, inappropriate, and clearly on power trips, while others are just stretched too thin to lead effectively. You can work late, deliver great results, and still feel like it’s never enough. The culture rewards compliance, not creativity, and it’s hard not to feel anxious every single day. What’s worse is the inconsistency, the same leaders who insist on office attendance often work fully remote themselves, many not even based in Texas. It’s frustrating to be required to sit in an empty office just to join Zoom calls all day when collaboration doesn’t actually happen in person. It is a culture of “do as I say, not as I do.” And when it comes to HR at Ruder Finn, (Touchdown’s parent company) things only get worse. Complaints aren’t handled seriously, responses are defensive and dismissive, and there’s a clear lack of empathy or accountability. The HR team treats people like liabilities, not humans. And if you don’t believe me, ask half the team who left within just a few months. That kind of turnover doesn’t happen in a healthy environment, it happens when people are burned out, underappreciated, and tired of the toxic culture. I genuinely believe I did everything I could to succeed here, but this environment makes that impossible. There are far better agencies out there that value balance, respect, and actual people-first culture, this is not one of them.

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