Great Place To Work - Anonymous employee Verndale Employee Review

5.0
Jun 4, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Incredibly smart and talented colleagues who are always willing to help. - Supportive, kind, and approachable coworkers that create a welcoming environment. - Culture of collaboration and shared goals, people genuinely care about doing great work. - Competitive salary and solid benefits.

Cons

- Project workloads can be demanding, with some employees managing multiple projects alone. - The high project volume may lead to stress at times.

Explore other reviews about Verndale

5.0
Mar 28, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I am always learning and growing and bettering myself here, as Verndale nurtures its employees. Great environment, great people. The owner and leadership team are as transparent as they can be with company information, upcoming changes, trends, et cetera. I work with the most excellent Marketing Services team and we have a lot of great clients that make the job so rewarding.

Cons

Often, there are back-to-back meetings; context switching is hard, but it is inevitable at an agency.

1
1.0
Feb 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Some colleagues are knowledgeable and willing to help. - Fully remote work.

Cons

I regret accepting this role. In my experience the company fosters an environment of heavy micromanagement and persistent pressure to meet billable hour quotas. Managers expect near immediate responses to Slack messages, which forces frequent context switching and makes deep focused work nearly impossible. Deadlines are short and the expectation of 8 billable hours per day is enforced strictly. PTO and professional development are effectively penalized because they reduce billable time. There is also an unusual expectation that employees must proactively post in a Slack channel when they are low on work and then solicit assignments. This shifts the responsibility for finding billable work onto individual contributors while they are still held accountable for meeting quotas. When meaningful work is not available, employees can be reprimanded for not meeting targets despite having followed the company’s process for requesting assignments. Meetings are frequent and often lack clear outcomes while managers closely monitor day to day tasks. I observed abrupt terminations with limited feedback provided to affected employees. The combination of micromanagement, unclear expectations, and punitive treatment of PTO contributed to high stress and turnover. The role negatively affected my mental health, and I left when a better opportunity arose. If you value uninterrupted focus time, transparent policies about billable hours and PTO, and clear support for professional growth, ask specific questions in interviews about response-time expectations, how billable work is assigned, and how PTO is treated.

7
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