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The Dallas Opera

Is this your company?

Good culture and good people but stuck in the past... - Anonymous employee The Dallas Opera Employee Review

2.0
25 Aug 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great, great people throughout. Team atmosphere and the employees really care about what they are doing. Beautiful office and relaxed day to day operations.

Cons

The upper management recycle the same ideas over and over again hoping for different results. They are stuck in the past and unwilling to change. In general the marketing ideas are hopelessly status quo. There is a lot of status quo here and this also goes for the lack of opportunities. You will likely be put into a box and you will live in that box with no further opportunities or real say. Overall, this is sad considering the high quality of ideas and people employed here- many of them are going to waste. In my opinion this is a sign of strong personnel and severe mismanagement of resources = poor quality leadership (especially in the Marketing department).

Explore other reviews about The Dallas Opera

5.0
15 Apr 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Organized and highly communicative. Professional, fun, and generous time off.

Cons

Pay is not a liveable wage.

1.0
3 June 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The work itself is genuinely interesting and varied. If you're self-directed and technically skilled, there is real satisfaction available; the problems are complex, the environment is dynamic, and you will learn a lot. Dallas's arts community is worth being part of. The mission is meaningful, and that counts for something.

Cons

Leadership culture runs almost entirely on personal relationships and proximity to the inner circle. If you aren't in it, your contributions are extracted rather than credited. Work you produced becomes someone else's talking point. Decisions happen in informal conversations and get handed down without explanation or input from the people most affected. Scope erosion is a real pattern here. You can be hired with a clear mandate, deliver results consistently, and gradually find your authority migrating to someone with better access to the people at the top, regardless of who has the expertise. Don't expect your job description to protect you. When you raise concerns through formal channels, the process tends to feel more performative than functional. Accountability is applied unevenly depending on who's involved. Loyalty networks are durable and largely consequence-free. Compensation doesn't reflect the complexity of the work or the hours required. Administrative processes are slow and opaque. If you need clear answers on budgets, spending, or decisions, expect to chase them.

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