The Knot Worldwide reviews

2.8

41% would recommend to a friend

(482 total reviews)
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Raina Moskowitz

46% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

The Knot Worldwide has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 482 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The The Knot Worldwide employee rating is 27% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

482 reviews
2.0
Mar 30, 2023

Product/design should stay FAR away

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people you work with day to day on the IC level are some of the most amazing people you'll meet. Everyone below management and leadership wants to do the right thing; incredibly talented, kind, and taken advantage of.

Cons

I am only one of many who believe that TKWW was truly the worst experience in my career thus far. Please look up the other reviews from product and design. The company is very active on social media and on LinkedIn trying to promote their "positive people culture" and boasting about winning culture awards while their employees are being actively bullied by leaders across the company and HR can do nothing about it. I will admit I fell for it, too, and when I came on board, almost immediately there were red flags everywhere that were hidden throughout the (ridiculously long) interview process. If you are in product or design, I promise you- you don't want to work here. The atmosphere is one of constant anxiety, fear, and burn-out. There are a couple of ICs strewn about the product org who are most likely happy or fine, but it's only because they've been chosen as a favorite by executives or leadership. If you are not that favorite person- good luck. I want to preface that I'm not writing this from a scorned point of view or trying to make the company "pay" for the trauma and bullying I endured during my time there. I am simply trying to warn anyone incoming on the product and design side of things that things are not what they seem. I wish I saw a review like this when I was interviewing. Even in the last 6 months 4 people have been bullied out of the company (or had to go on leave because of the stress) for reasons that to this day are still not clear. It would make sense if there were some bad apples who were bringing things down or underperforming- but there's been no evidence of that anywhere. Product and especially design are micromanaged like you've never seen before. There is no room for creativity, innovation, or freedom. Not even the "favorites" get that. You will receive "feedback" almost every day on anything possible; you will receive feedback on things you never even realized someone could give feedback on. This is not a centralized cancer, it's widespread and starts at the executive level that trickles down. Partly, I feel bad for management as I'm sure they are just as pressured and terrified everyday as ICs. It's an incredibly unhealthy culture and way to live. The people who had gone to HR and other leaders about the favoritism, bullying, harassment, and hostility end up with a target on their back. Every time you try to do the right thing by the book, you still don't end up protected or in a good place. I do NOT blame HR for anything because I know in the end, they're powerless unless leadership and the executives want to take action- which they don't. I also want to make it clear this is not an experience that is held just by me, but by many at the company right now. Management and leadership has actively been trying to push out legacy employees (who are probably costing them a lot of money) and trying to bring in shinier, newer faces who cost less and are unaware of this toxicity of the company. They are putting high performing people on PIPs out of nowhere and lying about their employees in order to cover their own skin. It's truly insane how it's allowed or considered legal (honestly not sure it is). To put it simply, when I think about this place and what it's done to me and others- I can't imagine recommending someone take a product/design job here. I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy. When every single person in your life- whether it's family, friends, your own co-workers, your therapist, etc, tell you almost every week "You need to get out of there", take it seriously. No job is worth the sacrifice of your mind and body.

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The Knot Worldwide Response
3y
Thank you for taking the time to leave this review. It’s evident that your experience at TKWW did not match up with our goals of promoting a unique, positive employee experience. We believe our company culture makes us an irresistible workplace, and we regret hearing that this wasn’t your experience. We value 360-degree feedback at TKWW, and we encourage employees to have open communication, including specifically with managers and People Business Partners. We want to assure you that we do not condone discrimination or harassment of any kind. Our culture is built on our core values, one of which is “We do the right thing”. This means that we always strive to provide a respectful, supportive, and empowering workplace for all employees. We are continuously working to improve our processes to ensure that every employee has the opportunity to contribute to their fullest potential here at TKWW. For example, most recently, TKWW leadership has held open conversations about how the nationwide concern regarding burnout can be addressed and how to ensure psychological safety among our teams, including the Product Design organization. We recognize that in striving for high performance, we must also hold space for employees to voice their ideas, thoughts, and concerns. We appreciate this honest feedback about your experience. We are committed to creating a positive and inclusive working environment for all employees, and we value your feedback in helping us achieve this goal.
1.0
Oct 7, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people doing the work day in and day out are good people. The engineers and designers I worked with were collaborative and understanding; they desired to do the right thing. Leadership, unfortunately, though does not recognize those doing the work or quite frankly care.

Cons

Honestly the worst and most toxic environment I have ever worked in. Absolutely no appreciation for good work or independent thought. The company has sketchy morals and will do anything to make a sale. They don’t actually care if their product is good or helping people. Money runs the ship, not the user experience. They commit to things like DE&I long enough for a good PR stunt but there is no substance. They say they are agile, but they don’t understand agile principles. There is no commitment to velocity or getting tickets done in a sprint. The code is an old monolith, and leadership is slow to make foundational investments to change it and tech debt is rampant. Also as a PM it is very important to be able to report on very basic user behavior and analytics. But such little investment has been made there, that you have to make ad-hoc requests to data science to find out things as simple as how many users logged into the platform in the last month and from where. There is a quarterly OKR cycle that is based on sounding good rather than doing good. More time is spent planning than anything else. And forget moving forward with innovative ideas. Everything has to be approved by sales, which runs a fear based ship. If there is a product improvement that MIGHT have a negative impact on a small minority subset of users’ perception of the product — forget it. Instead of addressing the root problem that may be impacting users, they try to hide it and leadership won’t support incremental improvements or even testing because of a fear based on assumptions, not proof. At one point I had 10 standing meetings a week with different overlaps of departments just to give status updates. Please stop micromanaging. You hired people to do a job. Let them do that. It’s such a repetitive waste to constantly have to prove your are doing work and making progress. That lack of trust and belief in your employees is apparent and exhausting. Additionally, leadership does NOT celebrate launches or big wins. I had to beg my bosses to write notes to the team congratulating them on a launch or even taking 30 minutes for a zoom happy hour. Multiple times after launches where I’d been awake for 24 hours+, I’d meet with my boss that day and they’d just immediately start talking about the next thing I should be doing and how behind I already was on that. No acknowledgment of what had just been launched. If you like sounding busy and speak business jargon well, you may be okay. But don’t expect to receive acknowledgment of work that actually has an impact — especially if you proved leadership wrong on an assumption with that work. There is no accountability. Favorites are played. Obsequious order takers do really well. Don’t expect your boss to understand the complexities of the code, how long it actually takes to find answers, and to do things well. They’ll deride you publicly and have unrealistic expectations. There is no leading by example. They may not be able to do it it or maintain the standard set for you, but you had better or else. Literally was threatened with Performance Improvement Plans multiple times. I was bullied and threatened multiple times. I would not recommend working here to my worst enemy. No one deserves to be treated the way I was — especially as a passionate employee who really cares. Fortunately, it does look like people are starting to stick up for themselves and leave the environment. Also, HR is useless. They have NO IDEA what is happening in their departments and they don’t care. Like most of the culture, HR does a good job with sounding good and doing pithy things. They have events throughout the week and a meditation break for example, which would be nice if anyone could take the time to attend, but when you don’t even have enough breaks in meetings in the day for lunch there is really no point. I’d have meetings from 9AM to 5PM and then actually start my work. Unlimited PTO sounds nice until it is denied. Some departments take it to heart. Engineering could take 3 weeks off no problem. But I had PTO for 2 days that was strongly discouraged multiple times. Unlimited PTO is really just a ploy to not have to pay out vacation days. Finally HR has very little commitment to continuing education or employee growth. It is important to invest in your employees and that means more than just a random Udemy course. Bring in experts. Have team trainings. Don’t hire people into management roles with no direction. The product has a lot of potential, so it is sad to be blocked in so many ways. As stated in my pros the people at my level or below were really great people, but when leadership is sour it permeates the whole culture.

3.0
Aug 3, 2020

Great place to work if you're thin & blonde

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of upward mobility for white women at WeddingWire/DC office of TKWW. If you want to feel like you're working in a sorority house, it's the perfect environment.

Cons

Aggressively racist workplace. Though the top brass is Asian-American, no person of color held upper management roles. Black and Latinx people in particular are cycled in and out. A handful of us non-white, non-Asian people managed to stay more than a year, but it was a near-daily onslaught of microaggressions disguised as "company culture." There is a ton of gaslighting when any issue of prejudice or discrimination is raised. This in particular perfectly describes the experiences of many BIPOC women at the company: "women of color are often held to a much higher standard than their white and male peers and presumed to be less qualified despite their credentials, work product or business results. Perhaps even more alarming, they receive less support from their managers, according to a McKinsey and Leanin.org study. They are less likely to have bosses who promote their work contributions to others, help them navigate organizational politics, or socialize with them outside of work."

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The Knot Worldwide Response
5y
We are so disappointed to see this feedback. We truly regret that you feel this was your experience with us and, respectfully, do not believe this is representative of working for TKWW. We have always been an organization proud of our commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). We value doing the right thing and firmly believe that inclusion strengthens our team. We have a strong history supporting upward mobility and mentorship for all employees through our Mentorship Program and our many Affinity and Community Groups supporting under-represented groups. We recently reaffirmed our commitment to maintaining an inclusive workplace through a number of short and long-term initiatives. We are proud of our ongoing commitment to DEI in both our workplace and the communities in which we work as evident in earning a 100% score for five years in a row by the Human Rights Campaign Corporate Equality Index. With that said, we take this feedback extremely seriously, and I would love for you to reach out to me directly so we can have a conversation about your experience and talk about ways we can improve.
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Glassdoor has 649 The Knot Worldwide reviews submitted anonymously by The Knot Worldwide employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if The Knot Worldwide is right for you.