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Yellow Scene Magazine

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Yellow Scene Magazine Reviews

3.5

66% would recommend to a friend

(25 total reviews)
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Shavonne Blades

Not enough data to show CEO approval

54% positive business outlook

Yellow Scene Magazine has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 25 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Yellow Scene Magazine 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

25 reviews
1.0
7 June 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Let me start by saying that I left Yellow Scene over a year ago. I cannot speak to the current happenings of the company, but I can give an honest account of my time there and why I would not recommend it to any young designer. I also cannot comment on anything that an account manager might face in their day-to-day experiences as I was not in that position. My notes here are also based on being successfully employed for over a year at a different, even smaller company. Pros: - The work that you get to do can be fun and challenging. - There is a possibility for a raise at your 3 and 6 month reviews in your first year + yearly review - As a designer, the amount of different things you get to experience (photo shoot direction, a little bit of wordpress, a little bit of email creation etc…) is pretty great but is definitely not unique to this company. - The trade ledger can be a huge perk for people but personally I didn’t value it that much., it’s hard to pay rent in gift cards. - The team that you work in is pretty tight-knit. It’s great for bouncing creative ideas off of each other and growing together. - Some would consider getting the day after deadline off as a perk. However, you've basically already put in your day's work the evening before during the 16+ hour marathon. This is also pretty standard for publication companies with a similar cycle.

Cons

- Some of the above perks are lorded over you as a “reminder” that you should be lucky to work at Yellow Scene. I know that you don’t have to offer them and I do not expect them. - I felt that I did not earn my first raise based on my performance, I “earned” it because I happened to be on the publisher’s good side at the time of my review. That is not how performance-based bonuses/raises should work. - You are micro-managed in the extreme regardless of whether you’ve been there for 1 week or 3 months or 1 year. You will never be trusted to do your job no matter the quality of work you produce. - Because I happened to be a few years older than my co-workers, they constantly had to deal with being told that I was more responsible/better/a harder worker than them simply because of my age even though all of us worked extremely hard. - On top of ageist remarks, the publisher makes racist and sexist comments. She passes them off as jokes if you call her out on it and then goes right back to it. Having a “strong personality” is a great thing! Constantly demeaning others is not. - The basement office was very dirty. I think that it’s perfectly reasonable to have the staff clean it up once a week from regular work-related usage. What I didn’t find acceptable was the lack of provided cleaning supplies and the fact that nearly every day we had to pick up dog poop or clean cat urine from the basement hallway that had been there since the night before. - The publisher plays favorites and it can change on a dime. I was lucky enough to be on her good side for a majority of my time there and experienced no difficulties myself. However one of my coworkers got on her bad side and their work started getting rejected for no reason. One day, I started sending their work from my email and visa-versa. Their work that I sent got approved and mine from their email got sent back until I made a minor change and then sent it again from my email. When I left that was still never resolved even though the employee had several meetings with her and the assistant at the time. - The work from home set-up while I was there was basically nonexistent for the design team. Eventually something was worked out but it was still really frowned upon. - The publisher gossips about former and current employees - The publisher does indeed yell. A lot. There was one “argument” I witnessed between her and our editor at the time; the editor was trying to make their point and the publisher just shouted “NO” repeatedly at them and interrupted them. Honestly at times I felt like children in wal-mart were more professional. - Adding on to the previous one, the publisher will berate you in front of your co-workers or even potential clients. And the thin walls in the office allow you to overhear every single word. - Any attempt to suggest change was met with childish resistance whether or not your idea was any good. You simply were not heard out and any new opinions were considered garbage. - While I was there, I did indeed receive two paychecks a month. Just barely some months; I can only think of 2 checks that were less than 2 weeks late. I honestly don’t get why some of these reviews are promoting this as a “perk.” It. Should. Be. Standard. If you can only afford to pay your employees once a month, then change your employment contract. And if you can’t afford to pay your employees then you don’t have a company.

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Yellow Scene Magazine Response
8y
we wish you much peace.
1.0
1 June 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The publisher is a good sales person (when she does her job, which is rare); you can see it in how much of her sales pitch is in all these new ‘anonymous’ 5-star reviews. You occasionally get gift certificates, however the publisher keeps whatever she wants before allowing staff to rush to whatever little she releases to them. The only other positive is that you can occasionally work from home, but not without constant micromanagement, which she (the publisher) claims she hates and never does. The employees that I worked with are great people, and we bonded quickly over the hostile work environment and were each other's support, those people have fortunately all left the company.

Cons

No matter how much the publisher spins these negative reviews, and lashes back calling them flat out lies, there is a reason there are negative reviews. She is currently attempting to flag them to have them removed. This is not one person launching a smear campaign against her, this is a large portion of former employees who desperately want to prevent others from having to go through the same frustration and harassment that we endured at Yellow Scene. It is a highly unprofessional environment, with frequent late or no pay. Bounced checks are a regular occurrence, it was a joke (unfortunately based in truth) that the first one to the bank is the one who gets paid. She will defend it saying it’s a ‘unique pay structure’ being paid bimonthly. What she doesn’t say, is that paychecks are frequently short the full amount so she can avoid paying the taxes on payroll. I left after several months of not receiving two paychecks per month, as per my contract. The contract (terms of employment) is heavily skewed to benefit Yellow Scene/SMB Advertising, and should never be signed in its current form. The publisher offers vacation time but will constantly remind employees that she doesn’t have to do it, and about how generous she is being. To accrue the second half of your vacation time per month, you cannot REPORT any over time. However, she has flat out stated in a recorded staff meeting that you should still be working the overtime, if you report it you will lose that accrued vacation time and the week off at Christmas. Her entire staff walked out after not receiving a paycheck for weeks. She attempts to view the work as “challenging but gratifying” (see title of one of her false reviews) and states that she makes it clear what is expected up front, but how she treats you is abuse (even if she does give you a mild disclaimer before taking the job), and the work never ends because she is always trying to claw her way back from the brink of failure. The claims she makes about the magazine’s success are false, she does not distribute the amount she says she does, she does not have the reach she claims, and she rips off clients and businesses constantly. I have witnessed many illegal business decisions be made (running credit cards without permission, etc.). I have never felt more unsafe, uncomfortable, or ashamed of where I worked. I hope that anyone reading this and considering Yellow Scene as an option reconsiders for their own wellbeing. No matter how she spins my words in her response, it is a desperate attempt to make mud shine.

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Yellow Scene Magazine Response
9y
The age of social media, where a person can create an email and go to town on their "reviews". If the goal is to tell the entire truth these reviews do not do so. The motive seems to be more draped in harming this company based on a personal motive. We are aware of your intent to continue to post. We can see them. I guess if repeatedly posting helps you heal all we can do is wish you well.
1.0
1 June 2017

If I could give it less than a star I would

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexibility to work from home when needed, gift cards to restaurants and some retailers, casual.

Cons

This magazine has been very lucky to have lasted this long taking in consideration all the frauds, lawsuits, and other illegal stuff going on behind the curtains. My purpose in writing this review is not to rant or talk bad and tell lies about a company that I worked for over a year. Instead, I want to warn future employees before getting caught by the publisher's lies and manipulative actions. ***BE AWARE, most of the positive reviews on here have been written by the owner*** First, checks are in fact given twice a month but you never know when. I once got my two checks on the very last day of the month. Another time I didn't see my checks until one month after. The publisher thinks it is ok to give partial payment to her employees, and constantly plays the victim and cries right in front of you so you can feel sorry for her. Second, the company is based out of a basement and the house in general is very dirty. There are cats and a dog that pee all over the place. It is the employees responsibility to keep the basement clean, however, there are no cleaning supplies to do so. Some of us had to bring supplies from our homes sometimes. The publisher plays favorites in a very hypocritical way. Some days she just doesn't like you so she'll do anything in her power to make your work 10 times more stressful. Plus a lot of gossip and trash talking from her part whenever an employee would leave the company. Also, her personal life interferes with the company negatively quite often. No benefits whatsoever, just trade (gift cards) about once every 2 months.

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Yellow Scene Magazine Response
8y
We wish you much peace.
Viewing 1 - 3 of 25 Reviews

Glassdoor has 30 Yellow Scene Magazine reviews submitted anonymously by Yellow Scene Magazine employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Yellow Scene Magazine is right for you.