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Notch Communications

Is this your company?

Avoid. Would not recommend to anyone. - Anonymous employee Notch Communications Employee Review

1.0
21 Jan 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Young team meant I made a good group of friends while I was there. I used this experience to teach me how important it is to do your research into a business before applying for a role.

Cons

Where to even start... - Lied to during the interview about size of the team and scale of the work we would be involved with. - Very junior staff in 'Management' positions with no clue on what they were doing - essentially they'd been given a promotion to entice them to stay. - 'CEO' made extremely inappropriate comments to employees - also no process where you could raise complaints about this. - Staff turnover was very high, no one I worked with while there is still there now. - No training or support given so everyone was pretty much winging it. The only time I heard about training being offered was when my colleague threatened to leave. Outsourced most of what we did to freelancers. - Clients really didn't have a clue just how inexperienced the team was. - At my time of employment they took on Sandwich Year students from local universities, paid them pennies but expected them to take on the same workload as full time employees. Clients were also unaware that uni students were often the only people working on their project (not sure if they still take in uni students but 'CEO' and 'COO' are the same so wouldn't surprise me if they are still following this approach). - The mood of the office was completely dictated by the mood of the 'CEO'. - I was unable to have annual leave requests approved without being asked in front of the whole office what I was using my time for. - 'COO' lived in a different country, would come over once a month and, again, would change the mood of the whole office. Also heard of occasions where she spoke really unprofessionally to people (more her manner than what she was saying) although she had the decency to do it away from the main office. Unfortunately for me, I was an ambitious graduate sold an exciting role promising support and plenty of great opportunities but actually I was left completely disappointed. I couldn't get out of there quick enough.

Explore other reviews about Notch Communications

3.0
16 Jul 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Like most places, the people make it. I miss a lot of people from Notch, from both working together and complaining together. My experience was of a company that (when things were going well) had a positive vibe and lots of camaraderie, with trust placed in colleagues and a lot of autonomy to get stuff done. I think there's a combination of elements which will be hard to find elsewhere. If you're up to it, there are generally a lot of different projects that you can learn from or get involved with. Notch's clients are a mixture of large established companies and small startups, all in specialised industries. If you enjoy getting into the nitty gritty and marketing more technical services and products, it's a good place to be.

Cons

Senior management are sometimes too closed off and opaque. Projects and changes will appear without consultation, adequate explanation or training. Notch's own branding and website was handled poorly, and not at all like how we would do it for our own clients. HR and line management processes were not well established. I line managed someone who repeatedly complained about me. I know that I had areas to improve but, on reflection, I think that many of her complaints could have been dealt with through a quick chat rather than an HR process. I found it increasingly difficult to decipher whether my manager expected me to be clear, consistent and firm or to seek approval and consent for every interaction. Whilst these complaints were being dealt with I felt unsupported and 'presumed guilty'. I repeatedly asked for training and support, but did not receive any. There have been hiccups with hiring - at one point we had a string of new hires who had poor experience and/or were a bad cultural fit. Getting a more robust interview process sorted, and being more ready to say goodbye to people who weren't working well, could help. Process and Time tracking software - in an agency it's pretty much essential. During the three years I was at Notch, we used 3 different systems, each of which was 'relaunched' at least once. The latest was the least user-friendly, incredibly ugly, took a year to choose and set up and then almost immediately had to have loads of things changed about it. This was all begun before Notch had established the way that we manage projects, R&R and other key stuff. Sorting out that would have lead to a much easier time finding the software and setting it up. Instead we did a bad job that was rushed and changed a lot of processes all at the same time. I was made redundant, although a lot of that can be put down to market conditions. It was still a shock, as business had been good at Notch for a while. We had been told a few times that there was enough money to keep going for several months, even if we lost all of our clients.

2
3.0
21 Sept 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A lot of the junior team are well-meaning and work very hard. They also drive a lot of the positive culture at the company. There is a genuine drive to support employees from management. The negative workplace environment that's mentioned in the previous reviews doesn't seem to exist anymore with the new CEO either. The flexible work-from-anywhere policy is also a huge positive. There are processes in place to make it work well. It never feels like it is an obstacle for collaboration. For me, it was a reason to stay. It also seems to have a positive effect on talent retention.

Cons

Workload management remains a significant problem. Team members are sometimes expected to work late and there seems to be little recognition or compensation for the extra time or effort expended. There is a personal development programme, but it is general and un-targeted compared to my previous workplaces. Individual training doesn't appear to exist. Internal projects are often a mess of conflicting priorities and unmet timelines.

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