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ISG Communications

Is this your company?

Terrible work environment. - Anonymous employee ISG Communications Employee Review

1.0
19 May 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you're fresh out of college and need a brief gig to pay some bills and make your folks get off your back, this could work, provided you can endure the cons.

Cons

Psychologically toxic work environment. This is a family owned business run by an octogenarian boss who exhibits verbally abusive and outrageous behavior toward his employees on a daily basis. A third of the staff are uncommunicative family members who come and go as they please and are completely acquiescent to the boss’s methods. The non-related employees are there only out of some personal financial necessity. At first, everything will seem fine while you get situated in your new position and receive some basic training. Then it’ll start. The boss is a nanomanager and will scrutinize everything including lavatory and coffee machine best practices. If you make any error, however trivial, you’ll become the recipient of humiliating and abusive insults, threats, curses and vicious put-downs—for all your co-workers to hear. You’ll be blamed for failing to remember or do things that you didn’t have knowledge of in the first place. Although it’s a good quality magazine and well known in the industry the published rates are intentionally very high, enabling the boss to give “special discounts” based on how much money he thinks a company can spend. If you work in editorial, you’ll be a hack re-phrasing old material but with new dates and quotes. But the writers have it a bit easier. Advertising sales is a journey into oblivion. You'll get the very worst of the boss. For new business the remaining pool of qualified clients is narrow, and you’ll have to compete with a few other magazines that have a larger circulation and much better rates. You’ll never see your commission. The company makes most of its money by annually reloading large, old accounts that are all handled by the boss and another family member. You’ll be maintaining relations with small existing accounts that were generated by previous sales reps. You’ll be acquiring clients from the competitors, a tough gig since marketing departments buy once a year. You’ll be googling new business and leaving endless voice and email messages. If you’re professional, persistent, and above all, lucky, you’ll make sales. It won’t take a lot of accounts to cover your measly base, because clients typically sign ad orders for the rest of the year. So make money for the company and the boss becomes happy, right? Wrong. The boss will keep you around until you get enough orders to cover your base salary up to that point and some profit—then cut your position for some false or exaggerated reason and your accounts will go to the next rep who's hired. Oh, and when you’re first hired you will be given some bs story about how the previous rep left for some dramatic personal reason, and you’ll be instructed to tell the clients that same thing in case they ask why their account executive suddenly vanished.

Explore other reviews about ISG Communications

2.0
4 May 2010
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

the owner knows his business, you might be able to learn something about the industry and an old school way of doing things that can generate results

Cons

long hours, poor pay, dull office, no management interaction, boss shouts a lot, no initiative

1
1.0
25 July 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are lots of opportunities for accruing B2B writing and editing experience, depending on the owner's whimsy; that is to say, he'll sell the job to you in the interview stage as "writing-intensive," but on the job give you work that doesn't require any writing, only research and "re-writing." If you _are_ given the opportunity to do some writing, however, you'll probably actually get to see your name in print, which is a plus. In short, it's an okay opportunity if you're fresh out of college, or in college looking for part-time work -- that is, however, if you're willing to tolerate the job's cons, listed below.

Cons

This company is a mess. I was hired and fired in less than two months. I did some research and it looks like the longest duration anyone has spent in the Editorial Assistant position is less than six months, which gives you an idea of how inhospitable the work environment is. The owner yells and curses every day. I literally heard him say "F*** you" to one of the sales guys on a regular basis. He yells at you when you do what he doesn't want, but equivocates when explaining what he does want. I have a suspicion that he actually enjoys firing people. Like the other poster said, he knows what he's doing in that he's been successfully serving the landscape and irrigation niche for a while, but the guy is sadistic, frankly. Oh, and never disagree with the owner. I witnessed someone get fired for that.

2
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