BH Media Group Reviews

2.3

25% would recommend to a friend

(159 total reviews)

Terry Kroeger

25% approve of CEO

18% positive business outlook

BH Media Group has an employee rating of 2.3 out of 5 stars, based on 159 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The BH Media Group employee rating is 38% below average for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

159 reviews
1.0
10 Oct 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I work at a unit of BH Media Group, which owns lots of newspapers.. It is a great place to work, provided you are independently wealthy. The management hands out a cupcake to each employee on the Friday before each holiday, which is very sweet. The management will spare no expense on improvements to the physical plant. And they invest heavily in holiday decorations that are about the tackiest things imaginable. The management will hire a frozen lemonade truck once per summer and each employee is allotted one small frozen lemonade, upon presentation of your employee badge. (There is a downside to this, see below) The management will have an on-site picnic and provide free hot dogs and hamburgers (it is potluck for the sides). The departments also hold nice parties for all the workers who are leaving (see below). They have a company holiday party, catered by a cafeteria that is very popular with senior citizens and bums. The turkey is dry as a bone, the green beans are overcooked to mush, the stuffing tastes just like Stove Top and the gravy is so salty it would kill an infant. But, it is free. Management is quite willing to change a business practice or a policy VERY quickly and that can be a good thing if you despise corporate inertia. (But see below). The management is VERY nice to employees. They will frequently praise your work and joke around with you and slap your back and engage other cameraderie. But there is a good reason for this (figurative) stroking. (See below).

Cons

BH Media does not believe in raises. Ever. That is a company policy. The salary you are hired at will be your salary for your entire tenure there. It is frozen forever unless you are promoted. The free frozen lemonade may remind you of your frozen salary. In that way can be a downer. Management believes in another way of rewarding hard work. They call it a SPIFFY. A Spiffy is a bonus of a couple hundred bucks (it's a very small percentage of your salary) that you will get once per quarter if your company unit meets/exceeds its profitability expectations. If it does not you get nothing (except very flattering praise for your exceptional work). The bonus never gets built into your base. There are no cost-of-living increases. Management frankly states this in staff meetings. If you are interviewing there, you should inquire about this, and see if they are frank with you about it. Ask about the Spiffy, too. Essentially, management is playing two games here. The one for younger workers is called The Churn. They will hire young men and women cheap right out of college. In one or two years the young men and women move on because (understandably) they want to earn more money and they cannot do this at BH Media because it is against company policy. The game they're running with older workers is called The Screw. They know it's hard for older workers to get hired elsewhere, because of rampant and unchecked age discrimination in the hiring marketplace. And they know that older workers frequently have deep roots in a community so it's harder for them to move elsewhere. Management takes maximum advantage of both, and this breeds great resentment among older workers. There are hardly any company cars for work. This means if you are a district manager in circulation, you use your own car to run 3-4 routes daily (because few contract delivery people will do that job for what the company is willing to pay). And BH Media will give you 34 cents per mile driven, which is 22 cents below the federal allowance for tax writeoffs. I wonder (but do not know the answer) whether BH Media is claiming 56 cents of writeoff on every mile that they reimbursing employees 34 cents for? The problem with changing business practices very quickly is that frequently little planning goes into such maneuvers. That causes misadventures that can be quite entertaining (or frustrating if it's in your department). The health insurance sucks. You have high deductibles before any insurance kicks in, and the employees pay a lot for this coverage. It is a joke. BH Media charges employees subscriptions to the newspapers they work at. Employees get a 50 percent discount. This is almost unheard of in the industry (where almost everyone gets a free subscription). But, they do not force you to buy it.

2.0
27 Jan 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible schedule: I enjoyed working the afternoon shift and having weekdays off. I could take care of business (doctor's appointments, attend graduate school, interview for other jobs) while not having to take off personal time. Fewer work distractions: Most of my work week was on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, which meant fewer people in the office to interrupt my work with chatter and other organizational drama.

Cons

No future: The company (and to a large degree, the newspaper publishing industry) is on its deathbed because of incompetent management and lack of vision. Instead of looking at the internet as a mass communications medium, old-school newspaper leaders looked at it as a novelty. Now the industry is far behind and has let other platforms emerge as news sources with large audiences and revenue. Moreover, many of the old-school leaders who had such poor vision either retired or still hold these positions and think they can salvage the industry. Lack of diversity: The field is 90 percent white and its editors are 95 percent white (90 percent white male), even though the United States. As a black male with master's degrees in publishing and integrated marketing communications, I knew I had no opportunities in the field. The industry has received criticism for its lack of diversity for decades, and nothing has changed. Poor pay: Many of the copy editors and page designers were making less than $30,000 per year, which are poverty wages for a college graduate. The company then started hiring people with no journalism experience to be copy editors and page designers, naturally with errors appearing in all of the content. No telecommuting: The job is practically a virtual position, where the copy editors and page designers work on publications electronically produced in six other states. However, they all had to drive to the hub to work on the publications, even though some of them had a commute of 90 minutes to and from work. There literally is no interaction at the workplace. The editors at other papers emailed their budgets and stories, the copy editors and page designers worked on the sections in Adobe InDesign, sent proofs via email and then upload the pages though File Transfer Protocol. By letting people telecommute, the company could save a lot in overhead, recruit a wider range of candidates, and basically give employees a raise by lowering their costs of going to work. I remember asking the division heads why these people could not telecommute, and they looked confused and could not come up with a logical response. One person said, "We don't like people working across long distance from the workplace," even though, for example, a person was editing an designing a magazine for a publication in Alabama. I told them their real reason against telecommuting was that they wanted to micromanage people and they didn't want to admit it.

4.0
3 May 2017

Great to work for, but underpaying

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great people to work with, generally provides most tools, training, and resources to correctly do the job.

Cons

Career advancement opportunities are hard to come by, so are salary increases as they seem to be tied to individual property revenue streams even at a corporate level.

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Glassdoor has 161 BH Media Group reviews submitted anonymously by BH Media Group employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if BH Media Group is right for you.