Ansira reviews

2.7

34% would recommend to a friend

(673 total reviews)
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Paul Tibbitt

43% approve of CEO

19% positive business outlook

Ansira has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 673 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Ansira employee rating is 27% below average for employers within the Media & Communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

673 reviews
1.0
Apr 29, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Company events. Happy Hour on Friday afternoons. Young environment

Cons

Extremely low pay. Severely micro-managed Overworked and underpaid Horrible upper management in the trade promotion department. The company doesn't care about any account representatives and doesn't listen to any concerns Boring and monotonous work - same thing day after day No college degree needed to do the work.

1.0
Jul 22, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Insurance from first day of employment

Cons

Company has poor direction / guidance in all levels of senior leadership - essentially lost, and as a result, this company is a sinking ship. They do not value the people they interview or hire.

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Ansira Response
10mo
We appreciate you sharing your experience. At Ansira, we're committed to continuous improvement, including investing in training and employee development. We encourage you to reach out to your HR business partner to share more specific feedback so we can better support your experience here.
1.0
May 17, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

None, you are just a number.

Cons

There’s no reimbursement for internet, home office equipment, or wellness. The company is heading in the direction of outsourcing as many jobs as possible to India. You are forced to train India team members but then laid off after training. Managers do nothing except micromanage and take credit for all your work. The company is managed by employees who have been with the company since they graduated college in the early 2000s. They are tech-illiterate managers who have no idea how to manage people or work at a real organization. A senior director literally asked me how to export and save a PDF. Some managers have master’s degrees in “management”. That’s like going to leadership camp as a kid and trying to use that as a flex at a job. Managers micro-manage your every move and take credit for all your work. Managers will do little work except oversee your entire day (freak out if you take bathroom breaks or an extra two-minutes on your unpaid lunch break), constantly check if you’re online, and threaten you or employees you manage with PIPs. Managers will delegate all their tasks to you and then get angry/bully you when you do not complete a task immediately or if you must work overtime to complete those tasks. Meanwhile, the managers are logging in late and logging off early. I had four different managers because turnover is incredibly high. My managers refused to participate in any customer service aspect of the job despite the account being reliant on serving the client and customer’s needs. My managers refused to jump in on phone calls, emails, and messages to the client. My manager refused to learn the brand guidelines or how to process advertising claims on our account. The company forces good employees to leave the company because they do not pay them well, do not treat them well, and do not appreciate their hard work. POC employees spoke about how uncomfortable they feel that nearly all new hires are white and that management at the executive level only pays lip-service to bringing diversity to their team and throughout the company. The company and management are incredibly white. Management was asked multiple times to hire more representative staff. Persons of color do not feel welcomed or represented at the company. The company was purchased by a private equity firm with a horrible track record with the companies they have purchased. The new CEO has serious SDE. The company is engaging in massive rounds of layoffs in the US to outsource their client service and tech side to India. Despite this, they gave massive paydays to the former CEO and CFO. “It also includes “aggregate change in control payments” of $1.92 million to Arnold, Ansira's president, and $1.96 million to Rudy Gonzalez, CFO and COO, according to internal information reviewed by the Business Journal.”(The Business Journals “Coming Up Empty”) Ansira has defaulted on paying rent at its offices and had to delay at least one pay period due to lack of finances. “The owner of Ansira's headquarters building, NSI Ventures LLC, sued Ansira in May in St. Louis Circuit Court, saying the company had stopped paying monthly rent of $219,197, according to court filings. (The Business Journals “Coming Up Empty”) Meanwhile, hard-working employees are paid waaaay under market price. I am talking about a starting salary of $38000 for employees in Chicago. That’s a criminal underpayment. Management burns out their good subordinate employees because management is reliant on the good employees to complete management's workload. Management sell out these employees to their supervisors and blames every mistake, missed deadline, and missed KPI on them. The company forces good employees to leave the company because they do not pay them well, do not treat them well, and do not appreciate their hard work. most employees are in a state of overworked anxiety and unhappy with the way they are being treated.

Viewing 19 - 21 of 673 Reviews

Glassdoor has 689 Ansira reviews submitted anonymously by Ansira employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Ansira is right for you.