TriMark Digital Reviews

3.2

51% would recommend to a friend

(35 total reviews)
avatar

Randy Goins

39% approve of CEO

50% positive business outlook

TriMark Digital has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 35 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The TriMark Digital 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

35 reviews
1.0
19 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice coworkers who were welcoming and helpful.

Cons

The CEO created a sense of anxiety among employees. Random unannounced huddles, having people do two jobs at once, providing hypocritical feedback, etc. Seriously, people had a / in their job title. He also asked very personal questions about your family dynamic, which in my opinion, is very unprofessional. Not to mention referencing religious scripture in the workplace (which has no business in the workplace). Another red flag is there was no real HR department, which caught my attention within the first 10 minutes of my first day. Would not recommend this company even for a short amount of time, as there’s no real training structure. Ended up leaving pretty swiftly and was able to snag a job where I can now work on my own terms remotely and was properly trained.

1.0
7 Aug 2025

Great People Trapped By Incompetent Leadership

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are a ton of incredibly talented and kind people who do their best in spite of the chaos. Some client work is interesting. The pay is decent, benefits are solid, and the half-day summer Fridays are nice (if you're not too anxious to enjoy them).

Cons

Leadership here isn’t just flawed, it’s actively harmful. What looks like a “build your own path” culture is really just a lack of structure disguised as opportunity. There are no clear benchmarks for advancement, and anyone outside leadership’s inner circle is left to guess what success even looks like. The ones who do “move up” tend to have more gossip skills than strategic digital marketing skills. Favoritism is rampant, feedback is weaponized, and performance reviews are inconsistent at best (chances are you’ll never even get one). Raises and promotions are doled out based on loyalty and vibes, not merit. Ask for clarity, and you risk being labeled arrogant or unloyal. The CEO sets the tone, and that tone is manic. Decisions shift weekly. One day you're tracking all your time, the next only billable hours. Return to office policy? Changes by the month. New platform rollouts? Announced, walked back, re-announced. Are we hiring? No, but the CEO met this super cool person and couldn’t not offer a job! When bad reviews appear, the entire organization is dragged into late meetings where leadership insists “no one feels this way” while cameras slowly turn off. The culture of fear is real, and the gaslighting is baked in. If you haven’t already heard this from other reviews, the CEO has a really bad habit of making inappropriate comments, blurring personal/professional lines, and fostering an environment where being contacted on nights, weekends, and PTO is not just common, it’s expected. Mental and physical health take a hit, and any attempt to set boundaries is seen as a lack of dedication and loyalty. But hey, they gave you a mental health day a couple years ago and did yoga once, so you’re fine! Get over yourself! Even though it appears a 7 year old could run an organization better than this, they’re very very smart! There is no HR department by design, not due to oversight. Bringing concerns to leadership (your only option) tends to result in one of two outcomes: dismissal or disproportionate drama. Gossip from someone in the inner circle who you don’t work with on a daily basis often outweighs the actual feedback from your direct team. Job security is fragile, even if you’re on leave or navigating a personal crisis. The kicker? The best people either leave or are forced out. The ones who stay are often too burnt out, too scared, or too stuck in the horrible job market to make a move. It’s hard to describe how disheartening it is to watch super talented people be minimized while the “loyalists” rise for doing nothing more than keep leadership’s ego intact (and they do nothing else, trust me).

1.0
25 July 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good pay and benefits. Fully covered insurance premiums for employees and good 401k match. Coworkers are smart and kind. Half-day Fridays during the summer. Some clients provided really interesting work.

Cons

There is a culture of fear and "yes men," like many other reviews state. Asking for a performance review, title change or raise can result in punishment or termination. The lack of HR is by design, so the CEO can exert complete control and not face consequences for inappropriate behavior. That behavior ranges from claiming distant Native American heritage to appear more "diverse" to discussing his and employees' sex lives at work. Men who play golf receive preferential treatment, including playing a round with the CEO during workdays (while women and non-golfers are expected to cover for them). Verbal abuse and threats of termination are common. The VPs and senior directors turn a blind eye, either defending these practices or downplaying their impact on employees. This leads to no one feeling safe voicing a concern. Career paths don't exist, leading to employees becoming stagnant in their careers and burning out. Finally, the lack of diversity is disappointing. Any references to "diversity" at the company only concern gender, not race.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 35 Reviews

Glassdoor has 38 TriMark Digital reviews submitted anonymously by TriMark Digital employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if TriMark Digital is right for you.