iHeartMedia reviews

2.9

33% would recommend to a friend

(2,841 total reviews)
avatar

Robert W. (Bob) Pittman

36% approve of CEO

23% positive business outlook

iHeartMedia has an employee rating of 2.9 out of 5 stars, based on 2,841 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The iHeartMedia employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Media & Communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
1.0
Feb 27, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

As a creative, you'll get exposure and the opportunity to learn to design for plenty of different/major platforms and mediums. iHeart can also look great on your resume. The team dynamic and camaraderie can be great and a lot of fun. Work/life balance can't be beat. Project managers are really quite amazing. Annual bonuses can be nice.

Cons

As a creative, the work you're most proud of will likely be neutered by executives who have no vision, or worse, your best work may never see the light of day. Aspirations to produce a better product are often quashed by either deprecated business models or execs protecting their teams' lack of skills. Sometimes, deadlines come hard and fast and with little direction. There's basically no opportunity to grow and learn as a creative. There have been times when teammates have been thrown under the bus to protect higher-ups. The same higher-ups will try to convince you you'll never earn more than the mid-range salary iHeart offers; likewise, the benefits are not even competitive (poor health coverage). Cliques can run rampant within the team. Boardroom presentations can be a very toxic experience.

1.0
Feb 19, 2015

Nice people.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The work is fine and coworkers awesome

Cons

Horrible health care. Toxic management. No salary increases but additional work always given

1.0
Feb 18, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nearly everyone that works there is SUPER poor, even the top talent and most of the sales staff (they couldn't afford to buy a home in the market I worked in) so you don't feel like you're the only one being screwed. You get a lot of free food and tickets if you can out run the in-house prize pigs. People you meet will think you make a lot of money because you work in the "media." Girls will think you can make them famous. It's fun to talk on the air to thousands. You don't have to have a degree or any type of usable experience to get hired.

Cons

First things first, the company is $20.5 BILLION, yes with a "B", in debt. This means they are firing 33% of their staff this year. 90% of the workforce is part-time, even after 20 years with the company or more people remain part time. Unless you work in one of the top 10 markets, you have four types of fellow employees: "Trust-fund babies", "Always blame someone else" or "Never makes a mistake," "I'll do ANYTHING to keep my job," and finally the "I just won't show anyone how to do my job, that way they can't replace me." In this business that is the only way to have longevity, to become one of those four types of radio employees. If you are an honest, hardworking person you will be USED and spit out like a bum. No matter what you do to keep your job, expect to top out at around $40,000 no matter what area you work in. So, prepare to always need a second job to make ends meet. If you DO get a promotion, you might as well just draw a big "fire me next" target on your back. Seriously, I've seen dozens of people get moved from part-time to full-time and lose their jobs within a year for "business decisions." They try to offer "laid-off" employees a demotion to Part Time right away to avoid having to pay severance and unemployment. They turn their backs on you after they fire you no matter how long you've worked for them. Most of the skills you learn aren't usable in other job fields, so when you stop enjoying your job, GET OUT! The job becomes an addiction because, regardless of the reputation, everyone under the sun thinks it's "cool" to work in radio. It literally becomes a disease as you can't see yourself getting a "normal" job. 99% of the people that work there have never and will NEVER talk on the air or meet anyone famous. They will hire ANYONE off the street and make you try to work with them. Nepotism is rampant, I was forced to work with somebody's worthless nephew and even though the guy was a moron I got blamed for all of his mistakes. Most of the people you work with are trust fund babies with no conception of supporting themselves, I'm talking even people in their late 30's to 50's living off their parents. It can take decades to get your "shot" on the air and even then expect to be told you suck and that you will get demoted to a news reader or fired within the year. None of the managers are college educated and if you have or get a college degree they will mock you for it and belittle you for "wasting your time". Because none of the management is college educated they have no clue how to manage and take to mocking employees for sport. If you complain you will be looked at as a whistle-blower and blacklisted. Also expect the GM to fired every couple of years and the new guy or gal to fire everyone around them and hire their our of work friends who have no management skills but only butt-kiss skills. This means don't bother kissing the big wigs' butts because they won't be there long. The management in place are all sales or teeny-bop music focused and think all other forms of radio are worthless money wasters.

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