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Phi Mu Fraternity

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Professional Sorority Girl: Not All It's Cracked Up To Be - Anonymous employee Phi Mu Fraternity Employee Review

2.0
22 July 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

This was not like a real job. Cake every day, meetings where we sat on the floor in a circle and talked about girls getting engaged/pregnant/fat, days to decorate the building for holidays.

Cons

Management showed favoritism. It was hard to work with so many passive aggressive women. They are more concerned about spending money on Lily Pulitzer than they are about advancing the Fraternity. They don't listen when people have suggestions and are unwilling to value you if you don't fit in to their mold.

Explore other reviews about Phi Mu Fraternity

5.0
15 Feb 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Weekly check ins, travel to new places for free

Cons

No input into where you travel

1.0
28 Oct 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Loved the job for 4+ years—great routine, supported the sisters, felt part of something meaningful.

Cons

1. Poor accountability for management misconduct
Leadership failed to act swiftly on a serious staff complaint (physical assault), delaying investigation for weeks and prioritizing the accused over employee safety. 2. Unclear or unfair job expectations
Housekeeping staff were regularly asked to clean personal spaces (like the house director’s private living quarters), which fell outside official job descriptions and created unnecessary tension. 3. Lack of support during crisis
When a workplace safety incident was reported, there was no immediate HR intervention, counseling, or protective measures—leaving employees feeling vulnerable and unsupported. 4. Culture of favoritism over fairness
Long-term staff felt decisions (like discipline or task assignments) were influenced more by personal relationships with leadership than by policy or merit. 5. High turnover risk due to unresolved conflicts
Without strong mechanisms to address bullying or aggression from supervisors, dedicated employees may feel forced to leave to protect their well-being

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