Red Ventures reviews

3.1

53% would recommend to a friend

(2,051 total reviews)
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Ric Elias

56% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

Red Ventures has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 2,051 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Red Ventures employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media & Communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
Mar 10, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits package, and if you're willing to base a career around deceiving people over the phone all day and don't mind being micromanaged by supervisors who don't care about you or your personal growth, you can actually make some good money.

Cons

Where do I start.. This job treats you like the bottom of the barrel, because in their eyes you are the bottom of the barrel. You're only there to service their numbers, and when you inevitably quit they will bring someone else in immediately. The time off is minuscule at best, the performance coaches are there to tell you how horrible you are (even when your numbers are above expectations), and you are basically under their full control. You are the most insignificant piece of their business model, and no matter how much they try to make it seem like they do, they don't care about you. The turnover rate is atrocious, it's easy to get fired and people are quitting almost weekly (even people who are doing very well!!). I was going to recommend this job to my friends until I actually hit the floor and realized I would never try to convince someone else to work here unless they were cold-hearted and obedient, because this job is for the cold-hearted and obedient. I will be leaving this job very soon and I can't imagine how relieved it will feel to never have to walk back into that dungeon.

1.0
Sep 14, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The only positive thing I can think of about RV is that the people you work with are by and large great. You’re all suffering together which leads to a sense of fellowship. The good people are great and the bad people are terrible.

Cons

I would only ever return to work for red ventures if I was facing homelessness. That’s how dire of an environment you’d be walking into. Regardless of what reviewers they pay to write good reviews or what they pay to burry bad ones, the vast majority of people who work for red ventures stay less than a year and most people are miserable. This is an environment that micromanages every single thing that you do. You have to put in a request to use the bathroom and your bathroom breaks come out of your overall breaks. Meaning that if you have to use the restroom twice, you’re not going to get much of a break at all. You have less than 60 seconds to breathe between calls before your screen turns red. They log how much time you spend inactive and will penalize or fire you for it. They expect you’ll stay less than 3 minutes of a 10 hour shift in red. They schedule you for mandatory overtime and choose what hours you have to work. If you don’t work it, they’ll fire you. This went on for months despite promises they would cease. This meant that I would often work 14 hour shifts with less than 30 minutes of break time after my bathroom breaks. As a company they have very little concern for the well being of their employees. I saw a girl with chronic seizures be fired after having a seizure on the floor. I watched them fire a man who had worked there for almost a decade promising him for years to formalize his promotion only to fire him after he returned from surgery. There’s really no job mobility. Being on the phones is the worst of it but even if you get promoted, your stress levels increase because your pay is determined by how well your team does. Racially there’s a lot of diversity on the floor and yet almost none of the managers were people of color. Black women make up the majority of their workers and yet during my time there I saw less than 4 in management positions. The majority of management is comprised of white males who make racially insensitive comments on the floor. If all of this isn’t bad enough, I was sexually assaulted by one of the managers there and nothing was done about it. I was forced to continue working with him until, after being hospitalized due to stress from this job, I finally put in my resignation. I wasn’t emotionally capable of working for almost a year after the 2 years I spent at rv. At the end of the day, they know the environment they ask their workers to work in is horrible. They know this so much that they offer you almost 2 grand just to stay past 3 months. Their turnover rate is so high that they’re constantly hiring. They hide behind fun things like bowling allies and money machines when the reality is that few people are able to take advantage of these amenities due to overwork. And you really don’t even make that much money anymore. I made less than 35k before taxes and I was a MSA. So if you’re not facing homelessness, please consider working elsewhere. If you died on the floor they would replace you within hours.

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Red Ventures Response
6y
We take this feedback very seriously, and we would like the opportunity to actively look into these allegations. Could you please contact us directly by e-mailing your previous HR business partner? Or you may use the information on our website to get in touch with our general HR team. We are deeply committed to building a safe and inclusive work environment for all employees, and we take immediate action when we hear of experiences that do not align. Thank you.
2.0
Aug 23, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pay at Red Ventures is competitive with the market. It's not amazing, but it's fairly competitive. Red Ventures also offers "unlimited vacation". This is mostly true in practice. There is technically accrued vacation, but PTO is untracked. Breakfast tacos are catered twice a week which is pretty great. The kitchen is nicely stocked and the office manager is pretty responsive about food requests. I don't know if this is a Pro, but this is an easy job if you are looking for a place to coast. Not much is actually expected out of you as a software developer and a decently seasoned dev can fly under the radar easily. Don't be scared of the "we like to move fast" mantra that is thrown around. That really means, "You don't have to actually deal with the hard stuff."

Cons

The #1 problem with working at Red Ventures in Austin is job stability. Red Ventures has a long history of buying companies and closing remote offices down after a year or two. The "global office" does not know how to deal with remote offices. Firings and lay-offs have become a constant fear in Austin. The software situation is a mess due to most of the infrastructure from all offices being the product of halfway done proof-of-concepts. Many of the original developers have moved on or been "let go" so untangling the software stack is difficult. Management in Austin is generally disinterested in actually fixing problems. There is a culture of "looking good" so management is encouraged and rewarded for chasing the new shiny thing instead of building solid software. Dealing with problems becomes and after-hours responsibility of the developer. Growth path is mostly political. After ascending past a Junior level position, promotions become increasingly based on politics. This becomes a real problem once you have to start playing politics in Charlotte, NC from Austin, TX. At that point, you can either move to Charlotte or coast the rest of your tenure at the position you have. "Move fast and break stuff" actually means "POC is good enough for production - let's move on." - the job gets repetitive fast. You'll never be short on work because there is always the next shiny thing to chase, but you never dig into a problem either. One of their core values is "Everything is written in pencil." which has become an internal joke about how goals and requirements will change every week.

Viewing 46 - 48 of 2,051 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,285 Red Ventures reviews submitted anonymously by Red Ventures employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Red Ventures is right for you.