Great place where you can learn - Will Not Disclosed Telum Media Employee Review

4.0
28 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Never ending learning - You can finish your work at 5pm and continue tomorrow - Management respect your time after working hour

Cons

If you are unwilling to learn, adapt, and trust the processes set by management and prefer to do things your own way because you think you know better. then this company is not for you. An inability to follow due to lack of capability can be taught and developed, but a lack of willingness to follow cannot, and will inevitably cause issues.

Explore other reviews about Telum Media

2.0
9 June 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Convenient location -Lovely and supportive teammates -No overtime so great work life balance

Cons

-The company has restructured 4-5 times during my tenure, which resulted in layoffs almost everytime - in an already small company. Company direction seem confused; their only product is a media database and offers not much else, so I question the corp's competitiveness -Senior management personnel is lean which means less time devoted to junior employees. Despite taking initiative and raising suggestions managers don't take advice. Naturally work feels stagnant and pointless without clear career progression benchpoints.

1.0
7 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Office is conveniently located near public transportation, making commuting easier. • Hybrid working arrangement offers some flexibility. • Supportive colleagues — everyone is going through similar challenges, which builds a sense of camaraderie. • Most managers (Not HOD) are approachable and genuinely try to support and fight for their team members.

Cons

Once you’re in, it’s extremely difficult to get out. • Lack of clear planning and long-term strategy — everything feels reactive and unstructured. • Day-to-day work environment is highly stressful and overwhelming. • Leadership (HOD level) lacks experience, with some having little to no corporate exposure. • Micromanagement is common — leaders tend to control everything instead of empowering the team. • Minimal benefits, only the bare minimum provided. • No clear career progression or growth opportunities. • Promises are often made during hiring or retention discussions but rarely fulfilled. • Workload is heavy and can lead to burnout — you will feel the pressure. • Poor employee retention; many who join end up regretting their decision. • Limited support or guidance from management, making it hard to succeed.

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