Venn Strategies Reviews

2.0

13% would recommend to a friend

(50 total reviews)

Stephanie E. Silverman

16% approve of CEO

14% positive business outlook

Venn Strategies has an employee rating of 2.0 out of 5 stars, based on 50 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a poor working experience there. The Venn Strategies employee rating is 46% below average for employers within the Management and consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

50 reviews
1.0
30 Mar 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some employees have good connections that can get you a job elsewhere

Cons

For starters, Venn has a horrible reputation, alarmingly high rate of employee turnover, a business model dependent on constant churn of short-term client contracts, and a nonexistent HR department that engenders hostile workplace. Most importantly for those with relatively nascent careers, there is no substantive client work to be done, which means you will not develop any marketable skills or knowledge while there. Sure, you might advance after 5 years and attain a meaningless title like "Vice President" (which they hand out like jujubes to anyone with a pulse), but you'll still be paid below the market rate, and will leave there dumber than when you came in, and with your reputation tarnished. The bulk of Venn's income is derived from coalition/association management. This means that, unless you're a principal, you're going to be doing a lot of admin work. Those with any kind of work experience (or education beyond a GED, for that matter) will find this to be mind-numbing and tedious. Worse yet, these coalitions are typically oriented around a single issue, and it's generally controversial. Take, for example, ESCA: they advocate for an egregious tax loophole that allows businesses as S Corporations to shift their tax burden onto employees via an Employee Stock Ownership Plan. Same with the Campaign to End Obesity; literally the one issue they lobby on is longer scoring windows, a quixotic and unrealistic way to achieve their policy goals. The list goes on and on. On the management side, the individuals who will be your bosses are that special breed that is (a) horrible at managing, (b) an awful person, and (c) dumb. Do not be fooled by the facade of an open-concept office that looks like an Ikea showroom - Venn Strategies is the laughing stock of K Street. Since leaving Venn I have erased it from my CV, as the gap in my employment history is easier to explain away than its presence. I urge others to avoid this hassle altogether and just look somewhere else...even if it means working at Arby's.

1.0
30 Jan 2024

Save Yourself

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- A select few amazing people work with on the health team (but you'll also trauma-bond with other junior staff or overworked VPs as well!) - Bonuses are a decent substitute for poor pay and scarce vacation days - You will have plenty of opportunity to work on different projects (with no acknowledgment from management (MT) & at the expense of your mental health/any work-life balance you hope to have!)

Cons

Let me start by clarifying that I had a better experience than most Associates who had the displeasure of working at this company: CEO/MT: - Health Team leadership is absolutely incredible but clearly has no autonomy over their own department, which speaks volumes about how the CEO micromanages everything they can. - The CEO loves to pick favorites. The only problem with being one of their favorites is it means they can use you as a punching bag for when they're in a bad mood. - The CEO can't figure out why junior staff turnover is so high, but they refuse to consider a cost of living adjustments, pay raises, additional vacation days, etc. for anyone below the VP level. - Last year, the CEO was acting Chief Strategy Officer for one of Venn’s clients, while they were on the client’s Board of Directors and leading the same client’s lobbying team through Venn?? It was a very confusing and murky situation. - Even though this was a hybrid job, I still received plenty of passive-aggressive comments about not being in the office. The CEO is a real stickler for attendance, even requiring some employees to come work from the CEO's house while the company was moving buildings and did not have an office space. - For the 2+ years I was there, Venn only hired senior staff because of their connections, not because of their skillsets. Once those connections were used up, these managers were fairly useless and became burdensome to the rest of the team. MT ended up just trying to find busy work or transition them to new projects so they would feel useful. These managers are paid too much to rely on everyone else to do their job for them. Culture: - Venn has no real HR department, which means there is no real accountability unless administered by the CEO. Sexual and verbal harassment is rampant but goes ignored unless MT is concerned about a lawsuit. - Diverse junior staff turnover is disgustingly high, but MT can't figure out why young gay and people of color don't want to work for a company that exploits and tokenizes them for the optics. Venn's DEI Committee is stifled by the CEO/President's antiquated perspective on maintaining bipartisanship within the firm, making it feel like MT is unsupportive of diversity and inclusion efforts. - Venn touts their levels system as “innovative” for professional development, but it truly is just a BS mile marker for whether or not they like you. Only a select few (aka the ones the CEO likes) will get to skip levels (even if your current level doesn't appropriately reflect your skillset). If you're not on a strict lobbying path at Venn, you're not getting promoted, no matter how hard you work. - Venn will quite literally ignore any cries for help from burnt-out employees as long as they're meeting deadlines. Taking mental health days is necessary in this line of work, but is frowned upon here unless you're in the midst of a literal breakdown. - Having 6+ managers at a time is wild for a junior staffer. The structure of teams and management can be overwhelming for some employees. Advice: - It will take you some serious time after leaving this company to feel like a normal, valuable, worthy person again. I suggest investing in a good therapist! - I'm sure I will get an email from a member of management asking me to take this down very soon if they don't try to get it removed.

2.0
8 Feb 2024

Horrible is an understatement

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A team of colleagues who are always willing to go the extra mile to help each other out.

Cons

Like being micromanaged? How about promotions not to those qualified but rather to whoever has the best suck-up ability? Have ethics and believe in doing something right rather than just getting approval from the analysts? Then Venn Strategies might indeed be a good place for you to work. On top of that, you will be overworked, undervalued, and taken advantage of at every turn. Avoid working here at all costs.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 50 Reviews

Glassdoor has 52 Venn Strategies reviews submitted anonymously by Venn Strategies employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Venn Strategies is right for you.