Worst Job Ever - Campaign Manager VP Promotions Employee Review

1.0
Sep 16, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The relationships you build with people are great because you all have the worst job ever.

Cons

Any positive review is fake. The whole thing is a pyramid scheme. You are on the street trying to sign people up for charity come rain or shine (even snow). Jenna the "owner" is a liar, a cheat and generally one of the worst people i have ever met. She treats people like they are poo on the bottom of their shoe and has her minions like Declan another failed "owner" who is now on the streets harassing people after his own business failed. She claims to have rang the bell (4 sales in a day) 212 times in a row but i was on the field with her when she did 0 sales and was trying to sign up literally anyone including clearly vulnerable people which was disgusting to see. Do not trust anything she says truly a terrible human being. Finally she tried to get a colleague to terminate their pregnancy all in the name of money so the person would still come into work. If that doesnt tell you all you need to know i dont know what will. You might see this business come up as Inspire 212 of whatever name they change it to because reviews are so bad.

Explore other reviews about VP Promotions

4.0
Feb 5, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good sales training, fun environment

Cons

Long hours, little vetting process, commissions could be better

1
1.0
Nov 12, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

With the company like this I get a sense of feeling like I'm living in Pakistan or India, not the UK. No pros whatsoever—right from the first interview, it seemed like a scam. The process felt impersonal and disorganized, with a pre-recorded video instead of genuine interaction. Promises of high earnings and an exciting work culture turned out to be misleading, masking a purely commission-based role with unrealistic expectations. The lack of transparency and absence of a base salary made it clear they were more interested in recruiting as many people as possible than in offering real opportunities.

Cons

There’s no base salary—it's strictly commission-based. They expect you to work six days a week without guaranteed pay. During the first interview (a Zoom meeting), I noticed it was a group session with over 10 other candidates. It quickly became clear that the session was just a pre-recorded video, with no opportunity for anyone to speak or ask questions. The setup feels like a scam, resembling a pyramid scheme. You’re classified as self-employed rather than having an actual contract with the company, which means they avoid paying a base salary. They lure you in with promises of travel and a positive work culture, but it’s all just empty talk. The role they advertise isn't marketing related but sales related where youre expected to harrass people on the street and ask money for various causes (charity donations, etc).

1
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