Decent Starting Point for Photographers Looking to Break In. - Photographer CADY Employee Review

3.0
2 June 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

My coworkers were excellent, kind people. Choose your own workdays, excellent for maintaining a work/life balance. Commission pay for "Elite" photographers Diverse team; you get to meet lots of people with differing perspectives. A great way to meet talented photographers and videographers.

Cons

Early mornings and late nights. Pay is somewhat lacking, though not terrible (starts at $15/hr usually) Style guides and reviews are inconsistent, making it hard to tell what you're doing wrong or how to fix it. Senior management is, frankly, incompetent. Outwardly racist or sexist schools were completely ignored for several years. Seasonal, with basically no work from late April-early June. The photography itself? Boring. Bland. It's Shutterstock material. If you do something interesting or unique, sorry, it's not "CADY standard." Artists or creatives need not apply. The CEO doesn't even know how to handle a camera. If that's not telling, I don't know what is.

Explore other reviews about CADY

5.0
6 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I learned so much by working there

Cons

Sometimes the customers are a bit rude, but my manager was alwasy there to back me up.

2.0
20 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great stepping stone to something better.

Cons

CADY appears to be led by individuals who lack a clear understanding of how to effectively run a business. The company promotes a “welcoming” culture, but in practice, it often feels performative and rooted in outdated or uncomfortable approaches. The environment within the Innovation Center is consistently tense. Teams frequently experience internal friction, and HR maintains a highly visible presence that can feel more like surveillance than support. In October 2025, Josh Cady abruptly eliminated the work-from-home policy with no transition period. This decision left many employees scrambling to adjust, particularly those who relied on remote flexibility for childcare and other responsibilities. The PTO policy is notably limited for a company of this size, and the absence of dedicated sick days only adds to employee strain. Removing remote work mid-year, while offering minimal time off, reflects a lack of consideration for employee well-being. Daily interactions can also feel forced. For example, employees are greeted each morning by HR in a way that often comes across as insincere rather than welcoming. Overall, CADY feels disorganized, undercompensates its employees, and provides minimal benefits, contributing to a challenging and unsupportive work environment.

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