employer cover photo

Katie Bush Design

Is this your company?

Katie Bush Design Reviews

2.8

33% would recommend to a friend

(21 total reviews)

36% positive business outlook

Katie Bush Design has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 21 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Katie Bush Design employee rating is 25% below average for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

21 reviews
1.0
3 July 2019

Run Away!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The office is hip and located in a nice area of Louisville. Pay is competitive and the benefits are better than average, including paid healthcare. Also, they provide snacks and, on occasion, lunch. The client roster consists mostly of the Silicon Valley “elite” who appreciate that KBD provides inexpensive designs quickly with only minimal fees for multiple rounds of revision and allows clients to art direct projects themselves.

Cons

I have never encountered a workplace culture as toxic and unorganized as the one that exists presently at KBD. There is a lot wrong with this place—a complete lack of project management, poor leadership, and a caustic culture where employees gaslight, gossip about, and undermine each other with passive aggression and not-so-subtle popularity contests—which is sad, because from the outside looking in it should be a cool place to work. Bless their hearts, that isn't even the worst of it. Managers will say they are working on a project, only for it to languish for months before being dropped, half-baked, onto a designer's lap days or hours before the deadline. Then, when deadlines are missed, the production staff gets blamed. Projects started by management are often created in incorrect or outdated programs (large websites designed in Photoshop or print documents in Illustrator), with structures so unorganized and broken that production staff must spend hours redoing work before beginning the endless rounds of pixel-pushing edits that every project goes through. Edits work similarly; they will often sit in a manager’s queue for days waiting on feedback, before being returned with a dozen changes (major, minor, and sometimes contradictory) either right before a meeting or just as the designer heads home for the day. Furthermore, micro-management is ingrained in the DNA of KBD. Once I had to work in front of my manager’s desk making minor revisions to a dozen web layouts while the minutes until the client presentation meeting were literally counted down out loud. Every few minutes my manager would offer art direction such as, “move this down 10 pixels,” or “make that color 15% lighter”. Later, to add insult to injury, when I was in trouble—as employees arbitrarily are for extended periods of time—this literal micro-management was brought up as an example of “collaboration”. In this same conversation, I was told that 2019 would be the year when “everyone would be super excited to work late every night,” which perfectly illustrates the absurd level of cognitive disconnect between leadership and employees. The rest of the leadership team is no better. Heads of departments dislike and work to undermine each other daily. Gossip, tribalism, hypocrisy, and passive aggression are rampant, while favoritism ensures that some employees will constantly feel embattled, with a target placed on them as they work late to meet ridiculous deadlines, as others play Tetris and shop online for hours, then leave early. Favored employees are allowed extended leaves of absence during busy parts of the year with no compensation to the remaining, over-worked employees for their increased workload. Certain managers will schedule pointless one-on-one gossip meetings or attend client meetings where they have no business to discuss as a way of filling their timesheets and thus avoid doing work, while other managers refuse to work with certain employees and ignore processes put in place to try and make things run more effectively. Employees and managers who do speak up are often punished by being demoted, being isolated and removed from projects or teams, being given unfulfilling and menial work to do, and being placed under a microscope where minor mistakes are blown out of proportion. There are other issues that become unbearable over time as well, including leadership's irksome habit of referring to employees as “children”, a certain spouse distracting or pontificating at employees during work hours or at office functions, upper-management’s chronic tardiness and absenteeism, and constantly being told that the high-school intern is a better designer than you are. All of this sits atop a bedrock of distrust and disrespect. HR has been known to read the personal chat logs of employees and gossip about the contents with managers, partners and spouses are contacted when employees fail to check in during PTO, and things said in confidence to one manager will later be thrown back in your face by another. Overall, all of this makes for a highly stressful and noxious work environment in which your happiest day will also be your last.

1.0
9 Feb 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Great location. - Awesome building (historic Carnegie library!). Yay...none of the above are assets owned by the company or would they add any compensation or value to your work. - Fully stocked bar & snack bar...but no time for lunch.

Cons

- Employee perks (if you are able to use any of them, it will come with greed. Management has a tendency to repriment you for earning these “PERKS” and would go as far as to imply you may be taking some of the items bar or snacks home. - Travel as a mule for upper management. They will request for you to work constantly, while they pretend you are being rewarded by allowing you on the trip. - Projects are always rushed! You will be receiving projects at the end of the day...that need to be done by the end of the day! -Weird hours...9-6 (great if you are not a morning person...specially because you will be there until midnight in many instances) with lame excuses: such as this is the fast-paced work environment of Silicon Valley, our clients are always innovating and need projects done at a minute’s notice. -Company distributed an employee handbook referencing “The Devil Wears Prada” movie as a work guidance...if that gives you an idea of the Drama Free environment the company strives for. - Management is really egotistical and will prevent you from growing within the company. - Trips to meet with Silicon Valley clients are lame, as you would be expected to cater to upper management needs. - Company refers constantly to the “fast-paced work environment of Silicon Valley” in a way to make you believe that you need to produce more for less with no time.

1.0
20 Aug 2018

Avoid this sinking ship

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Bi-monthly chair massages (honestly, the best part of this job). Fully stocked snack bar, coffee, and weekly bagels. Good experience for a designer straight out of college—you'll learn print management and how to work quickly—but keep your resume up-to-date and your ears open so you don't have to stay long.

Cons

Lack of process and structure. You would think that a company would have the basics figured out at this point, but think again. There was little to no direction for projects, which left plenty of opportunity for Katie to make last-minute design changes without reason. Late night hours. We're talking multiple days of 9 am to near midnight for a certain client's annual project. Not to mention you'll be building the entire thing in Powerpoint, taking changes until the last minute. Cliques between groups of coworkers. Family-like company culture because they are family. Which means the drama and awkward dynamic is built in to the workplace. Bottom line: This ship is sinking. Keep looking for a job elsewhere because the stress isn't worth it.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 21 Reviews

Glassdoor has 22 Katie Bush Design reviews submitted anonymously by Katie Bush Design employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Katie Bush Design is right for you.