Read the reviews - Senior Associate Recruiter Russell Tobin Employee Review

2.0
Nov 20, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Many of the people in this organization are great, but a few good coworkers can't fix cultural issues at the level that RTA has them. Depending on your level/role, you may get access to tools like Hubspot, LinkedIn Recruiter, and Zoominfo - all nice to have. Tim Tobin is great - but as many many other reviews have mentioned, he is not the CEO.

Cons

As many others have recently stated, the goals/vision that they claim to have are simply not recognized or acted upon in any realistic way. Everything is performative to a ridiculous degree including a mandatory all-hands meeting on Monday mornings that includes, for some reason, a portion dedicated to having new hires sing a song in front of the whole organization? If you are coming in with no recruitment experience, don't worry - you won't meaningfully gain any here! The training program seems to be written by ChatGPT and the only career development opportunities come in the form of emails stating "increase your billing" or "increase your activity." All of which is happening while hearing about another layoff every other week and simultaneously seeing 15+ overseas new-hires every Monday morning because they are cheaper.

Explore other reviews about Russell Tobin

5.0
Nov 24, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I have worked at other agencies and Russell Tobin outweighs all of them positively. I feel supported, and like my contribution matters. Management is approachable and wants to see you succeed. Hybrid flexibility is a plus and the office is in a great location with free parking!

Cons

None that I can think of at the moment.

1.0
Jan 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

On the surface, this company employs many genuinely decent human beings, especially on the recruiter level. Unfortunately, the culture and leadership structure ensure that those people struggle to succeed.

Cons

The environment is steeped in toxic masculinity, where aggression, dominance, and performative confidence (especially from those who don't understand the industry or have never recruited) are rewarded over collaboration, empathy, or competence. Bullying behavior is normalized, often disguised as “directness” or “high standards,” and there is little accountability when it comes from the right people. Management regularly pits employees against one another, sometimes through surprise or random video calls designed to catch people off guard. These interactions feel less about problem-solving and more about “gotcha” moments—intending to embarrass and expose, while creating tension within the organization. This fosters fear, not excellence, and actively discourages trust or teamwork. Employees are not treated as people—they are treated as salaries and line items. Burnout is common, yet dismissed. Human concerns are framed as weaknesses. In meetings, it is not uncommon for a senior leader to tell women to “smile more,” reinforcing a culture that is out of step with even basic professional norms. At the top, the prevailing goal among senior leaders appears to be self-preservation, as they are promoted beyond their capabilities. Many seem focused on collecting paychecks and avoiding disruption, fully aware that their compensation far exceeds what they could command elsewhere. As a result, meaningful change is avoided, difficult conversations are postponed indefinitely, and dysfunction persists.

6
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