Offleash Reviews

4.7

93% would recommend to a friend

(42 total reviews)
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Robin Bulanti

79% approve of CEO

92% positive business outlook

Offleash has an employee rating of 4.7 out of 5 stars, based on 42 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Offleash employee rating is 26% above average for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

42 reviews
1.0
13 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Most of the people were truly lovely, kind, accommodating and great to work with. I had a wonderful time speaking to the jr level staff and the account managers.

Cons

I worked here for less than a year and interviewed for a different role then when I received my offer it was for a different role, I ended up taking it, but there was no conversation about how they thought this met my level of experience or why the offer was a different role. They hired about three people during the time I was there. I was assigned a "buddy" who ended up taking another role at another company, the buddy was very helpful and wonderful to work with. I asked after they left who I should be going to for questions and was not assigned a new person until about 6 weeks later. It is a given that PR is a fast-paced industry and that deadlines and demands can be a lot. As seen in the company responses on here: "Anyone who joins our team receives clear roles and responsibilities from the start (this information is included in the job post, interview process, and offer letter.) this was not at all what I saw. I spoke to multiple people who had been at the company for years who said they did not really get a JD, The JD I received was different from what my boss shared with me when I asked for it. AI will be pushed on you. AI is expected here, I understand the option to use it but to not use it at Offleash did not seem like an option. This was pretty disappointing especially without any conversation around the ethical concerns. In my second month of employment, I shared with my manager that I was going to speak to people I worked with for feedback on how to improve. She had agreed that this was a good idea. My manager was tough to meet with and get ahold of a lot of the time. We did not really have a regular meeting cadence and when I asked if she would like me to set it up and she had said that it was something she would do. That didn't happen. In my last week of employment here, I had a check-in with my manager early in the week. On Tuesday, she sent a recap of the call showing areas for improvement as well as things she shared were going well. On Thursday evening, I received a message from her asking to meet Friday morning. When I got on the call Friday morning, it was my manager and HR. Disappointing is a massive understatement of my time here. It takes two to tango, and I know that there were mistakes I made as anyone in corporate would expect less than 3 months into a new job. To give someone feedback then fire them 3 days later is something I have never experienced. The training felt hap-hazard. They stated I was not preforming to the level of the role, and 3 days after I received my first written feedback of my employment. This felt like the company was trying to create a pretext for my firing. I heard from multiple other people at the company that "this kind of termination was not really a new thing." Most of upper management that I interacted seemed like a cliquey mean girls club. This was very disappointing and left me feeling very negative after many interactions with them. Much of this felt twofaced. The company did not give me my handbook to sign until over a month into my employment. HR admitted that she forgot to send it to me and also shared on this call that another recent hire had not received it. The "work-life balance" did not seem to be such. My boss had shared that she and others were unclear what hours I was working, yet I had shared I was on ET from the start and communicated this to those I worked with on the day to day. This was something most people on ET seemed to feel, tons of messages after hours and I ended up being on late very often. This is expected in this industry, however this ended up being the norm a lot of the time. Responses are expected in 10-20 minutes, this left me feeling like I did not have time to do work because I was constantly getting messages. There was a constant state of stress that many in upper management seemed to impose upon junior staff.

5.0
9 Apr 2025

Great culture

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Positive energy Fosters learning and development Focused on delivering results for clients Pays for annual employees offsite for team development and training

Cons

Remote workplace means you don't get a lot of in-person time with coworkers

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Offleash Response
1y
Thank you for taking time to highlight so many pros about our culture, from the positive energy (always!) to professional growth. As a remote-friendly business from day one, our team is more distributed but that gives us the ability to draw talent from anywhere, a major plus in building the team. We continue to look at fresh ways to keep culture strong, from team-wide activities and volunteering, to our local meetups, work-aways, and epic offsites. Always open to suggestions!
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Glassdoor has 44 Offleash reviews submitted anonymously by Offleash employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Offleash is right for you.