A poisonous atmosphere - Editorial Living North Employee Review

1.0
8 May 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Made good friends as the trying circumstances brought us together. I got to lead a couple of sections on the editorial side, though largely through arriving as others had left and opened up space.

Cons

As many other reviews have pointed out, the atmosphere in the office is mostly awful. Invariably, one or both of the editor and publisher, who are a couple, would be angry about something, and that unhappiness and tension spreads out into the office at large. There's solidarity among the low-paid, young workers, but most are afraid to admit that they feel out of their depth having been given no training or even, often, a basic explanation of what's expected of them. As other reviews state, new ideas are called for and then completely disregarded. I've not worked there for a while, but every time I see a copy now it's clear that the same 10 ideas are being wheeled out over and over and over again. The unwillingness to spend money on original photography, for instance, and the constant rounds of very slightly varied round-ups and visitor guides makes it feel very Groundhog Day. Universally, young, green writers are dropped in at the deep end and given far too much work to accomplish properly, and then eviscerated when they, inevitably, get something wrong. What's most disorientating is that all errors – a wrong phone number, a misspelled name, a write-up of a closed shop – are treated with the same gravity. It makes writers extremely anxious, leading to more mistakes and slower work, leading to more kick-offs, then more anxiety, and so on. I started on £14,000 – which, looking back, I'm not sure was completely kosher – which was bumped up a few months in to something more reasonable. But friends on the sales team told me that salaries were wildly unpredictable, and I've seen people brought into editorial who were summarily turfed out after a few days. It's no way to treat people. Sadly, they know that using young people straight out of uni is a way of ensuring a flow of people who a) don't know that an office isn't meant to be like this, and b) will work hard for very little. At one point I checked a list of phone extensions and discovered that fully half of the office had left within a nine-month period. I ended up having panic attacks in the office and being put on antidepressants and CBT because of the frequent public dressings-down handed out by the editor and publisher, and I know that I'm not the only person whose mental health was severely affected by working here.

Explore other reviews about Living North

1.0
25 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Trauma bonded with other girls in the same toxic environment, good opportunity to practice steeling your nerves when being belittled and disrespected.

Cons

Where to start, if you yawn you will be shushed, if you whisper you will be shushed, if you look at a colleague you WILL be shushed. Terrible pay and attitude, considering you are made to feel as if the survival of the company rests on your shoulders. Working here stole the light from my eyes, maybe the positives were the friends we made along the way x

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