Cengage Doesn't Understand K-12 Publishing - Senior Content Developer Cengage Employee Review

2.0
Dec 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company offers average compensation. It gives manages a degree of latitude in finding opportunities for professional development for their employees. My colleagues are a great group of smart, creative people who know the industry and their content areas like the back of their hand. The new Chicago office offers a clean, modern space with plenty of conference rooms and great views of the city, as long as you can tolerate the drawbacks of an open floor plan: excessive noise, resistance to personalization, and lack of any semblance of privacy.

Cons

Life was so much better before Cengage. The namby-pamby corporate "culture" is numbing, to say the least. During the several years Cengage has owned National Geographic School Publishing, I have worked with only one Cengage-sourced manager (who has since left the company) who was effective and produced tangible outcomes instead of empty promises. Understandably, Cengage is focused on higher ed because that represents approximately 90 percent of its revenue, yet the company's leaders have stubbornly resisted providing for our business needs so that we can continue being fully successful. (So WHY did they buy us? Oh, right, so they could slap the golden rectangle on more of their crappy products.) Furthermore our catalog-committed marketing group is ineffective at collaborating with product development in any meaningful way.

Explore other reviews about Cengage

5.0
Mar 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Total rewards, time off, great people and culture

Cons

Lots of changes and uncertainty at times

1.0
Jul 13, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The individuals below the management level are good people, with some good people at management but C-Suite is horrible.

Cons

C-Suite hides their plans under corporate speak. Cengage was a family owned private company and they sold and ever since then has had, debt, schemes to shuffle and restructure debt while implementing RIFs after RIFs after RIFs...never ending and amazingly has been in increased this last year. From their actions it's outsource as much as you can of company operations and squeeze value from Intellectual Property. Look how many times they've renamed themselves. They had a CTO join for about a month or two until she realized it was a role with no team, no authority and left. The CEO is amazing at spin, you hear "great, great, great" corporate speak as the reality on the ground is "this failed, that failed..what!? they're gone!...what they moved that department offshore!...what!? that department is now a vendor relationship...oh we're not DEI focused because the wind changed". The trend is contraction not expansion, no ground breaking innovation. My jaded view from college on expensive books has only grew since I see how the sausage is made.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All