New Engen Reviews

3.7

56% would recommend to a friend

(142 total reviews)
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Justin Hayashi

97% approve of CEO

58% positive business outlook

New Engen has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 142 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The New Engen employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

142 reviews
1.0
10 July 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Honesty there really aren't any unless you're willing to drink the kool aid or are an ex-frat boy that peaked in college, much like the CEO.

Cons

The CEO is an unrepentant sociopath and a terrible businessman. He's kinda like Trump in that he managed to take a very significant amount of money and somehow throw all of it away through hubris and a general lack of intellect. I will provide two examples (of many) of his sociopathy before I go into how badly he ran his business. 1) During an all company meeting, he explained how anyone that knows him knows that if he is conversing with someone and then just starts walking away, it means he has lost interest in the conversation and you should stop speaking. Not only is such a quality rude and boorish, but the fact that he thought it was a totally normal thing to say to a room of 150 people is just completely insane. 2) This is the thing that made me bother to write up this review. Prior to COVID the company had to layoff about 25% of the staff. Of course, layoffs sometimes happen. They're a part of business. However, he decided to go on vacation and leave the layoffs to the rest of his executive team. He is a weak, pathetic little boy with no respect for anyone that works for him. But on top of being a generally terrible human being in every respect, he also happens to be a horrendous businessman. Initially, he was somehow able to secure a significant amount of money from investor friends of his despite the fact that his startup "idea" was not novel in any way. It was just software applied to digital marketing, with no particular value add over anyone else's software. Despite this, they had very significant growth early on due to the sheer volume of starting capital as well as contacts among his executive team that brought in a lot of undeserved sales. Instead of recognizing that he hardly had a differentiating product and needed to invest capital primarily in engineering, he instead decided to hire almost nothing but marketers. This turned the company into a typical marketing agency that happened to have a little software on the side. Additionally, the rate at which they hired marketers resulted in completely unsustainable growth. It was like someone drinking coffee non-stop--it works for a while but the crash is inevitable. The product never really went anywhere but in circles. Partly this is because Dave has no idea how his product even works and couldn't himself suggest anything to differentiate it from competitors, largely because he isn't very bright. Mostly though, it's because he cannot lead his way out of a paper bag. The product team was completely dysfunctional and all over the place and every few months they'd completely switch gears. Their biggest failure was putting what little engineering capital there was into a SaaS product that almost no clients purchased or wanted any part of. It was an unmitigated disaster. The product team--and just about every other team other than creative--were led by ex-frat boys who peaked in college. Dave hired based on whether he liked a person personally rather than if they were actually capable employees. Given that Dave is a terrible person, the kind of people he hired were also terrible people. And since he was too much of a dolt to lead any of these teams himself, he instead left it to the terrible people he hired. The results were predictable. The lack of a decent product caught up with them, clients left, and he had to layoff 25% of the staff--and that's before COVID reduced advertising appetite. From what I've heard, more layoffs have happened during COVID and the company is more than likely in free fall. The employees left are likely too scared to quit since the economy is so terrible. I feel bad for them. I'm sure Dave doesn't. Should Dave start another company or join one, I look forward to sending either his employees or his superiors LinkedIn messages describing how he went on vacation to avoid personally laying people off. I genuinely wish Dave all the worst as far as business is concerned.

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New Engen Response
5y
We have received your feedback and are sorry to hear you exited with such hard feelings. Here’s hoping your next endeavor is a happier one!
1.0
1 Oct 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you're fresh out of college, it's a great way to rapidly learn about marketing, business objectives, stakeholders, deliverables and how to best to communicate to senior leaders about expectations, deadlines and realistic goals. I've learned so much about how digital marketing works. Before this I had only experienced it a little bit, but it's fun getting to be the "Performance AI" by being an Excel master and communicating all the things to my clients. Working with well known brands and crafting a digital strategy for their success is actually pretty thrilling, for the most part. This at least helps drive me to work harder and work an absurd amount of hours.

Cons

Sadly, the other negative reviews on here hit the nail on the head precisely! Not just from one person's perspective, but we were all talking about some of them internally and how true they are. The corporate jargon ones tend to be far too obviously written by someone who is a "bro" or is one of the few faves of the Sr Leadership Team and can't seem to take their blinders off. I mean, when you have a Chief of People who patronizes everyone and seems to think that every female is his "little helper," ya got problem. When looking at one of the positive reviews, I sincerely wish that the issues here had to do with people not being able to adapt to change or rapid growth--that's an exciting challenge--but it couldn't be further from the truth. I've observed blatant sexism, favoritism, prejudice and the denial of these over and over again. And it's these that are at the root of most everyone's complaints. Well, and the pay. They say there's a regular cadence to promotions and pay raises, but then when it seems just the favorites got them and you ask why you didn't, they give no reasoning or justification. Oh and I dunno who's on the sale team that's happy. lol. Every person I've spoken to who's been on the sales team said they aren't happy and none of their colleagues are. Prolly why 90%+ have left. I hear the environment is pretty hostile, unless you get to cherry pick the deals you work.

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New Engen Response
6y
Thanks for your candor with this review. It seems like there is a disconnect between perception and truth, and I'm sorry if some decisions or actions have not been communicated clearly. I welcome the opportunity to have a conversation about your concerns and address a few of your assertions directly. I hope you would give us a chance to try to make your experience more rewarding.
1.0
29 June 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People are fun, if you drink.

Cons

You will either be a favorite of the leadership and given unearned power and promotion, or you will be a completely expendable and unimportant pawn in their quest for success, which they will not attain. They will not train you. They will not coach you towards a career path. They will not promote you based on merit. They will not be honest with you. You will not work for a qualified manager. Those who love working for New Engen do it with a cult-like loyalty to the leadership team, no matter how many times those leaders act against the interest of their employees.

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New Engen Response
5y
Thank you for your feedback. I'm sorry to hear that you didn't have a great experience working at New Engen. What you've described is not the kind of culture we want to build - if you'd like to chat more about your experience, please feel free to reach out to me: Katie Russell, krussell@newengen.com
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Glassdoor has 147 New Engen reviews submitted anonymously by New Engen employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if New Engen is right for you.