Reviews by job title

23 reviews
5.0
15 Jan 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong team mates, great atmosphere, good leadership, engaging projects, great benefits

Cons

May not be a great fit for those who need wfh flexibility. In-office culture is coveted

2.0
30 Jul 2024

Eh

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Was very easy to get hired.

Cons

No organization with payroll, state they are flexible with scheduling for personal projects/part time jobs, but asked for a minimum of 30 hours per week before training had even begun. No benefits.

2.0
20 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great stepping stone to something better.

Cons

CADY appears to be led by individuals who lack a clear understanding of how to effectively run a business. The company promotes a “welcoming” culture, but in practice, it often feels performative and rooted in outdated or uncomfortable approaches. The environment within the Innovation Center is consistently tense. Teams frequently experience internal friction, and HR maintains a highly visible presence that can feel more like surveillance than support. In October 2025, Josh Cady abruptly eliminated the work-from-home policy with no transition period. This decision left many employees scrambling to adjust, particularly those who relied on remote flexibility for childcare and other responsibilities. The PTO policy is notably limited for a company of this size, and the absence of dedicated sick days only adds to employee strain. Removing remote work mid-year, while offering minimal time off, reflects a lack of consideration for employee well-being. Daily interactions can also feel forced. For example, employees are greeted each morning by HR in a way that often comes across as insincere rather than welcoming. Overall, CADY feels disorganized, undercompensates its employees, and provides minimal benefits, contributing to a challenging and unsupportive work environment.

1.0
22 Jun 2025

GET AWAY. FAR AWAY.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Building a relationship with your team members, students, and the families of high school students -Exposure to portraiture and elevating photography skills (if you are able to be self-taught)

Cons

From a customer standpoint: - Angry Parents and Schools, Lack of Communication. Schools and parents would be told one thing, and the customer would be told the opposite from our end. Lots of upset families due to high pricing for simple/small items. Difficult website interface had parents having little to no idea about what they are purchasing, even after reading the fine-print terms and conditions. - Deceptive Marketing and Sales Tactics: Website displays higher end packages extremely large and "in your face". Many parents stated they are unable to navigate the website to purchase/book what they KNOW they want. If someone does not purchase anything from the high-end session types, Management is forced to call customers to try and get them to buy until management is borderline told to "stop contacting me". FOR THE HIGHER END SESSIONS: Pricing for prints and digital downloads is given to the parent/student in the form of a brochure. This brochure is given to them AFTER the session is completed. Parents and students go into the session not knowing what pricing they will be paying until the end, when all their photos are taken. The only way they would have a glimpse of pricing is if they were to navigate extremely deep through the website before booking the session. From an EMPLOYEE standpoint: - Countless hours of work, zero sleep. Anywhere from 15-20 hour shifts would be given to employees without any management intervention - Low pay, no benefits. Coming in, the company expects photographers to work 40+ hours a week, open availability 7 days a week, and provide zero benefits until that employee gets promoted. - Little to no follow up in Management. Took me 4 months to get my benefits even though I was told I would receive them approximately 30 days after promotion. That did not happen. Took lots of emails and other employees voicing themselves for all of us to finally get our benefits. Some photographers were told they were promoted but did not sign an offer letter. These employees believed they have been promoted when they were still receiving base pay and no benefits. This would eventually be resolved 6 months later and was properly fixed and handled. - Minimal Training, Constant Change of Structure: Took 5 months to be trained semi-properly and the layout quickly changed, reverting half of the training we just received. Training would last a few hours with lots of information thrown at photographers, and hoping they retain all thee information. Implement too many things at once. New ways of properly doing things were implemented too quickly without much revision. - Little employee retention: New hires would spend a week filling out the necessary paperwork and clearances, only to come into being worked 40+ hours in their first week, waking up at the likes of 5am or leaving at midnight (or sometimes both in the same day, to wake up at 5am the next morning again). Some new hires would leave within their first few days, some in their first few weeks after understanding the workload that management expects the photographers to handle. LIVING BY THEIR MOTTO (Management): They state they follow their motto and each individual part of it. I have yet to see an ounce of of that motto reflected in the management's work ethic, demeanor, or overall execution of how things should be run.

3.0
7 Oct 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You get to work in the photography field. Mileage and tolls are reimbursed. The culture is pretty great as well.

Cons

You are not paid a fraction of what you’re worth. Especially for outdoor and elite appointments. $15 an hour for $300+ work Lots of wear and tear on your car.

1.0
24 Mar 2025

Keep Searching for Another Job

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Being around creatives and having a dynamic day. Exposure to photography and the process it goes into selling.

Cons

This company is a great example of deceptive practices and exploitation of team members. In the interview everything is painted about love for team, students, and staff. Pushing for incredible results and curating an awesome senior photo session. All my coworkers either have their first year or second year with this company. The people I meet who have been here for years are mentally unwell and barely getting by on rent. My day to day was needing to do the most to protect the company's image, their branding, and how they carry themselves. Photographers are overworked with no breaks, no benefits, and the most chaotic scheduling you could ever witness. The people running the studios are under pressure all the time, aren't trained, and really this job is hyped to be the best when it's not. My manager treated us like we were in elementary school and I am sure we were the same age. I wanted to work here to be exposed to more of a creative industry and I am just witnessing my young peers being exploited by low pay, insane expectations, and false lies. Truly if your only options has been fast food, this is a set up. But really do yourself a favor and keep looking.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 23 Reviews

Glassdoor has 380 CADY reviews submitted anonymously by CADY employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if CADY is right for you.