Drake Cooper Reviews

4.2

82% would recommend to a friend

(17 total reviews)

Mindy Stomp | Jamie Cooper

87% approve of CEO

81% positive business outlook

Drake Cooper has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 17 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Drake Cooper 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

17 reviews
1.0
18 Feb 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some great people within the ranks

Cons

I had a terrible experience on the digital team at DC. If you want to innovate and be part of cutting-edge digital marketing and engagement - look elsewhere. If you show ambition on the digital team, you run the very real risk of being attacked and bullied by team leadership without the support of HR and agency leadership to protect you. Drake Cooper is shockingly behind the times with digital marketing, even though they talk a big game. There is flippant attention paid to data and results (or results are selectively manipulated to 'tell the story' that benefits the agency), and an alarming absence of engagement strategy and optimization testing in digital projects.  The digital team is overshadowed by inexperienced, competitive, toxic, and manipulative leadership who has zero experience outside of Drake Cooper. It shows. Leadership has a very minimal understanding of digital marketing, refuses to let managers own their duties, and actively cultivates a 'boys club' mentality among the team. Information flow to and from senior leadership is manipulated to to the supervisor's advantage as he actively undermines those with experience. 
Digital leadership cultivates a hostile environment on the team as the supervisor regularly derided those who differed from him, poked fun of and openly attacked people - calling them names if he didn’t agree with him. I regularly heard him call one teammate illiterate, another useless, and women throughout the agency ridiculous. When I gave a presentation to digital leadership and the CEO about some strategic ideas, the supervisor pulled me aside to tell me that I ‘disgusted him’ and that he ‘couldn’t look at me’. Threatened bullies lash out. The agency’s values of ambition, truth telling, etc. are mere lip service. When employees demonstrate these values (as I did with my presentation), they are told to sit down and shut up by unqualified fast-tracked leaders who grapple for power and prestige at every turn.  The digital team's interviewing process is alarming and discriminatory. I participated in interviews where job applicants were not considered because they were a woman with a young child, they had too much education and the supervisor said "people with multiple degrees don’t do well here", or they were simply older than the average age at the agency and they "wouldn’t ever fit in".  At Drake Cooper, there is a lot of talk about 'culture fit’, yet I have seen many, including myself, get slapped with the 'lack of culture fit' label - despite fitting in well with their colleagues and doing excellent work. It seems to be an easy, clean way for the agency to hire and fire as they see fit. Ironically, all of the digital team members that left DC within the last year and a half (who were incorrectly deemed 'unworthy' by threatened digital leadership) have gone on to score amazing jobs at Fortune 500 innovators in Silicon Valley - innovative and passionate digital movers and shakers clearly aren't welcome on this team. The CEO is much too distant from the ranks to understand what is really happening within teams, and extends far too much trust to his managers. It is very difficult to get time with agency leadership and, if you do, in my experience, your manager will always be there to control the flow of information in real-time. If you try to speak up and connect with the CEO, digital leadership will lash out. HR at Drake Cooper is uninformed and clearly pursues a ‘risk management’ rather than an ‘employee resource’ approach to HR. Despite claims that she is there to "curate" culture, in my experience and in those of many colleagues, HR was abrasive, manipulative, and unhelpful whenever approached. HR also lacked the savvy and maturity necessary to handle difficult employee situations professionally.  But what about the agency's listing on Outside Magazine's top places? Take a closer look at the award methodology - it's a ranking of employee survey feedback among the companies that submitted themselves for consideration. Don't be fooled into thinking that this award reflects a national endorsement. Also, take note - they didn't win this year. Read these reviews carefully- I personally witnessed the digital team mocking negative reviews on here and writing fake overly positive ones (they are easy to spot here). There was also a reputation management task force created to look at and mitigate negative reviews. In summary, even though many folks within the ranks are talented and friendly, there are major problems with leadership that make working at Drake Cooper stressful, frustrating, and full of political landmines. Avoid it.

2.0
27 Aug 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It's the perfect job for someone starting out and has no other relevant experience for comparison. (see intern reviews)

Cons

Let’s break it down: Lip Service - Standards are set for behavior and yet higher-ups often get a “gimme.” The employee handbook section on conduct even devotes a full-page that reads in big, bold type, “DON’T BE A 'EXPLETIVE DELETED.'” A crass (some might even say offensive) way of expressing what should already be common-sense courtesy to fellow human beings. However, this is a “do as I say, not as I do” policy. Those who have risen through the ranks have, time and time again, been known to bully, harass, and badmouth without consequence. Any attempt to document this or complain is seen as being negative. The CEO claims to have an open-door policy. However, once given any criticism, it is deemed as negative or falls on the deaf ears of HR. On more than one occasion, these ominous words have been uttered, “If anyone is unhappy with their job here, come see me and I will gladly help you out.” Sounds nice in print, but it’s all in the foreboding delivery that gets the point across. That door can stay open all day, but most people, if they know what’s good for them, won’t come knocking. Navel Gazing - Too much time spent on self-promotion and trying incredibly hard to be cool. The last two Holiday parties, clients got jackets and other merchandise with the agency logo on it. Last time I checked, clients want it to be about them, not the agency. Nepotism/Cronyism/Sycophantic - Despite being nearly 50/50 female to male, bro culture dominates — bone up on your sports and golf. Binge drinking is a bonus. Some unusual promotions of persons unqualified and untrained to lead a specific discipline such as the time that the long-term boyfriend of an executive v.p. was promoted from an account service position to leading creatives. Ageism - Little or no value is given to experience. Training and opportunities for advancement reserved almost exclusively for the young. Comments are thrown out regularly with complete disregard for the company present: “This is a young people’s business.” “We need someone younger to work on this.” Strengthsfinders (aka Lucky Astrology Mood Ring) - Whether intentional or not, these mood ring, color season, psycho-babble tests tend to put people into boxes. Introverts need not apply. Your talents and thoughtful introspection are not valued. You’ll be banished to “thought leader” status. Those who speak loudest and fastest tend to steal the credit and get the glory. Workspace - All image no substance. Open workspaces were once intended to encourage collaboration and increase productivity. Nowadays they’re a way to squeeze as many people into the smallest space possible to make the most money. The relentless din has become a personal time suck and distraction. Add to that the thumping playlist to rival any H and M being pushed out on speakers throughout the office and you get zero relief with very few free places to hide and actually get the work done. The catch-22; if you do hide away to get the work done, you’re accused of being inaccessible. Work furniture is somewhat stylish, yet poorly made and not intended for comfort or ergonomics. Recent redesigns did not include employee feedback that might have been useful in creating more successful outcomes. (e.g., happy employees without neck, wrist, elbow, or back injuries) Management/Operations - None seem to have the training, nor the time to manage other than push the work through. There are no teams, just people doing the work. There’s no empowerment, only fear of making mistakes. There is a constant compulsion to noodle the process at the expense of efficiency (ironically enough). In summary. Looks great with the window dressing. Not a lot going on upstairs.

5.0
13 Apr 2017

Ambitious Company

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I started at Drake Cooper as an intern and ended up sticking around for many years after that because I respected to agency so much. Here's a list of my favorite things: - While there was a beer fridge, culture was not defined by perks. It was defined by the collaborative, creative workplace that was dedicated to making kick-ass work. - There was a beer fridge. - The CEO and was transparent about company decisions and financial health. - They devoted time and money to provide employees with the opportunity to develop their skills and knowledge. - They rewarded proactivity with opportunity Most significantly, I worked with really great people who were insanely talented and a lot of fun to hang with. I felt supported both at work and in my personal life.

Cons

Towards the end of my time there, there was a lot of growth as well as how the teams were organized. That was a difficult time, because it felt ambiguous and never like there was a direct "This is how things are going to work now." moment.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 17 Reviews

Glassdoor has 25 Drake Cooper reviews submitted anonymously by Drake Cooper employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Drake Cooper is right for you.