employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Brown Paper Tickets

Is this your company?

Act first, think later - the WOES of BPT - Contact Center Supervisor Brown Paper Tickets Employee Review

1.0
8 May 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Brown Paper Tickets has a handful of pros. Specifically: free monthly Orca pass, free snacks, a dog friendly office and six weeks PTO. They also offer a pretty decent healthcare coverage.

Cons

The workload and overall expectation of the Contact Center department does not match the entry pay salary that is provided for those positions. While the company puts a large burden on the Contact Center to keep the company running effectively, they provide that department with the lowest pay and lowest incentive to remain with the company long term. There is very little room for growth or even opportunities to move up within the company and hard work is often only typically rewarded with more hard work. Upper management is unwilling to communicate with other departments within the company, due to a misguided notion that their employees are untrustworthy. Due to this, there is never any transparency between upper management and the supervisor team. Because there is never any transparency, it is very rare to actually know what is going on within the company and even more rare for supervisors to be fully equipped to provide representatives with proper assistance. This approach is mimicked throughout the entire organization and has created an atmosphere where communication is almost nonexistent. In addition to this, the lack of diversity within the company is shocking and the company has no real plan to promote diversity within the workplace. There is no real desire to utilize the natural skills of their employees or to use them to foster an inclusive and sustainable environment. The company’s approach to morale is lackluster and for supervisors, it’s nonexistent. Frankly put, there is no real support, plans, structure, diversity, direction, incentive, feedback, foresight or joy within the company. The best thing I can liken it to is that episode from The Office where Michael Scott is the “big picture” manager and Jim is the “day to day”. Brown Paper Tickets is a “big picture” company. They have a vision of what they want to achieve but no execution or foresight for how they can get there. The result is a company that is forced to address issues on a “day to day” basis, with no long term solutions. They are perpetually in a state of adolescence and it’s unlikely that will change.

Explore other reviews about Brown Paper Tickets

5.0
16 Oct 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The office is super chill and even dog-friendly, which adds a fun touch to the workday. My supervisor is always supportive and easy to work with, which makes things easy to handle.

Cons

I really like the casual environment but others may prefer a more corporate vibe.

1.0
7 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The team itself was pretty solid, everyone tried to make it work despite everything collapsing around them.

Cons

• Every three months there was a completely new structure, new reporting lines, new "strategic direction" and nothing ever actually lasted because by the time you figured it out, management would reorganize again and you were thrown right back to square one. • Training on something only to have your entire department turned upside down two weeks later so that process became useless. • It became impossible to plan anything when priorities kept getting shuffled and you were just waiting for the next pointless reorganization instead of actually doing your job. • The worst part is leadership kept acting like restructuring would magically solve everything instead of fixing what was truly broken, as if the problem was never the structure at all but management just kept moving boxes around hoping something would finally stick. • Eventually people stopped caring because what was the point of investing in anything when it would all change again next quarter, and instead of figuring out why employees were leaving, leadership simply reorganized again.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All