Custom Ink reviews

2.9

30% would recommend to a friend

(703 total reviews)
avatar

David Doctorow

23% approve of CEO

23% positive business outlook

Custom Ink has an employee rating of 2.9 out of 5 stars, based on 703 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Custom Ink employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail & Wholesale industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

703 reviews
1.0
Apr 12, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paid time off, remote job

Cons

The last 6 months of 2022 the CEO sent emails saying the company was financially fit and they were prepared for recession and no one needs to fear being laid off. Beginning of Dec, CEO sent email with the same rhetoric. First day of 2023 that employees were back at work, they announced two production facility closures and 20% of staff had been laid off. They lie, they put profits over decent management, adequate training, customer service, loyalty.

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Custom Ink Response
3y
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience—we’re grateful for your feedback. The closures of the Reno and Charlottesville production facilities in January were difficult decisions, prompted by increasing production costs and tight labor markets caused by the pandemic, but we tried to support impacted Inkers with generous severance packages and an extended benefits period. We always strive to learn from and listen to our Inkers, and we will share your feedback with the team. If you want to share further information, please reach out to us directly at inkerfeedback@customink.com
1.0
Mar 3, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Employee Resource Groups - finally in 2022. Entirely employee driven, there are Queer, Women, and Neurodivergent groups to create safe environments to empathize, share, mentor, and grow together. - Not much time made, but direct leaders are understanding and supportive of attendance, respectful of privacy, doesn't pressure people, and creates space for these groups in email communication. Paid time off - once vested (1 year of employment) - 4 five day weeks of paid time off. There is a rolling 30 day policy for unplanned time off: + 3 instances triggers a reliability conversation. Direct leadership is compassionate, clear, and open to hearing what is happening in the lives of the team. Professional Acceptance - it is possible to be yourself authentically and fully without compromise, regardless of religion, in my department. I cannot speak for other departments. In my team people actively respond, provide clear and candid feedback, and do their best while remaining professional. Leadership actively encourages development and self improvement through a variety of methods and accepts learning styles based on individual needs. Remote Work for some Not all roles are eligible for remote work. For those that are, Custom Ink has responded acceptably when regarding productivity and accuracy not being linked to physical locations. Again, I can only speak for my department.

Cons

- Compensations is not acceptable. Annual 'raises' are conditional on exceptionally above expectation performance and never more than 4.5%. The performance threshold increased every year during my tenure, sometimes twice a year. If you want to make more than your base pay you must be an exceptional performer. While this was clear at the inception of my employment, the complexity and technical demands of the job have changed dramatically during that time. You won't see performance bonus gains until more than 3 months of consistent numbers. Gains are not applied retroactively. - Executive leadership is not clear and does not care about the team. I don't have room to list all the ways senior leadership has lost touch with employees, so here are top contenders: Location closures, separations, lack of egalitarian support across departments, inaccurate training, prioritizing bottom line over team size, and desire to preserve a +15% growth rate over team health. - At one time Custom Ink was a place to grow your career. In the last 3 years the company has hired more external candidates than internal candidates and lateral moves were universally offered new job titles and teams if you are willing to accept paycuts. - Environmental impact is not treated as a priority. While there's plenty of discussion, leadership instead supports individuals who are willing to volunteer but does not implement additional ideas or dedicate employee or leadership time to these initiatives. - Benefits are no longer competitive. Parental leave time is fmla minimum. There is flexibility in some roles but not all for hours and weekly changes. Multiple instances of bonus potential are not realized or reduced and cited as 'budgetary need' to keep low. When we are busy, leaders are asked to have people shift hours instead of taking time off.

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Custom Ink Response
3y
Thanks for sharing your perspective. It helps us a lot when people let us know what they have experienced. All companies experience growing pains as they evolve but we strive to keep our Inker experience positive. We will share this feedback with our team and work to improve team member experience based on your suggestions. If you want to share further context, please reach out to us directly: employerbrand@customink.com
2.0
Sep 19, 2014

Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The physical environment is quite nice and comfortable (well as long as more than 3 people don't want to use the restroom at the same time). This is the 3rd office we've had in VA since I started and they've designed it from the ground up. They do an admirable job of making it a pleasant place to perform your job. They provide lunch once a week and provide other small surprises throughout the year. The Team Environment people are amazing. - There are some truly great people who work here. I've met some great friends and there really are many people here that live the 3 tenets That CI advertises as their ore beliefs. - The Health benefits are very good. About the best package you will find outside govt. if you are single.

Cons

Unfortunately CI depends on surface level benefits like a free lunch or a Cornhole Tournament to but a nice shine on what is really a glorified assembly line; complete with the industrial revolution reminiscent problems. - Compensation: The compensation is minimal for the volume of work demanded. They use a system called performance based earning. This is approached not unlike the way a server in a restaurant will make a lower wage as they can supplement their earnings via tips. At CI it is done via productivity monitoring. You make a minimal base salary, and then there are a series or incentives that you can potentially earn based on pure statistical performance. This is how they get around the concept of standard of living or annual raises. They claim that you control your own pay, and can simply earn more based on performing better. The interesting part is that if you don't reach these goals you don't just make your base salary, you are put on a performance plan, and then terminated. Making these earnings less a bonus to your salary, but instead a level of production that is demanded. Another facet of this program is that while you will sign an offer sheet with the details of these incentives and bonuses, they can and will be changed later, but not with your agreement. If a team seems to be consistently out earning, the PBE can be adjusted to make it harder to reach those incentives. This leads to another problem, the "raise" system is based on being able to consistently meet or exceed the goals of this program. PBE is measured monthly, by exceeding for 3 straight months you can increase your base salary by a small percentage, similar tiers can be achieved for 6 months or a year (this is not transparent information though, I had to learn about it via fellow employees, and Management does not monitor for the employee reaching these tiers, so you will have to request them). This becomes a problem as with the fluid nature of the PBE. Sometimes due to a number of circumstances the PBE will not be valid that month, since you did not out earn it, it does not count as a step towards your next pay tier. This happens quite often and trying to get your first raise may take you several years. Of course all things can be changed, and I've spoken with several people that were offered the raises without officially maintaining the required stats, while others had to spend months fighting for them Politics go a long way. -Leadership/Promotions: I fully believe that upper management thinks that everything is as wonderful as those Great Places to Work Surveys say. There is a significant buffer between upper management and the SS/Operations teams that make up the majority of the employee base. Middle management is were the information control seems to start. We take regular surveys to give feedback (positive or negative) to the company, but these are not anonymous, they actually go to your direct supervisors. Negative feedback or grievances can and will follow you in your time with this company and can essentially get you black listed. Despite the growth of the company, advancement opportunities are slim, there is a great deal of lateral movement, but not much for advancement. If you have earned the reputation as being a malcontent on one of these surveys (whether justified or not) these opportunities will likely be closed to you. I do think there are great people trying to be great managers, but the Brand trumps all. Lastly MOD system: This is a company wide policy of MODifying behavior. Which is a scary concept in itself, but that is the idea. Employees are instructed to assign errors to other employees if they see something in the work process that may disrupt them in any way from doing their role. There are guidelines, but the practice is inconsistent and can cause resentment/unbalance. These errors statistically calculate your accuracy on the performance based earnings. IF you do not reach the predetermined accuracy, you CANNOT out earn. So this is a system where fellow employees are in control of each others paycheck. This can cause friends to let errors go, while marking the same errors on other inkers. These are also not Anonymous, so an employee is well aware who has marked one of these error on them. An error that has the potential to greatly affect the monthly earnings of that employee. While we are assured that animosity will not be tolerated in this system, there is no way to police it. MODs will always be inconsistent and an unjustifiable way to hold an employees earnings hostage.

Viewing 22 - 24 of 703 Reviews

Glassdoor has 732 Custom Ink reviews submitted anonymously by Custom Ink employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Custom Ink is right for you.