Pros
Forced out of the door at 5.30pm Could eat lunch in the park and then walk to other appointments around SE1 Very acerbic line manager who made things bearable (since departed) Professional design team Sardonic editorial staff who were rowing in the same boat as I was Excellent Christmas dinner (I stayed on until the week after it, perhaps on purpose!!)
Cons
Gulia Selby is the MD. Others have made the case for and against her and I do not intend to add to it, save for the fact that it was the line manager who handed me an envelope to dismiss me. "I run a business," Gulia said as a reason for sacking me. That is semantically true... Others have mentioned the rude staff, but it really does change who you are if you are dependent on cheques from Gulia to exist. Sales staff returned to the company after time working elsewhere because, essentially, Gulia likes them and they know things slide at Samedan which would not be tolerated anywhere else. The sales jobs are brutal and I was forced to listen to their patter seven hours a day (8.30-12 and 2-5.30). I was not in a meeting to discuss my magazine and I felt so small and ignored. The machiavellian sales manager has three children to feed. I was depressed while in the job so had no energy to complain or fight back. There were several kind members of staff - at least one magazine editor, at least three editorial assistants and at least two accountants, who bore the brunt of Gulia (the G is hard as in gravitas) - but this was offset by the atmosphere, described elsewhere. Ultimately I lasted ten weeks but could see I would remain unhappy. I was late in for two days, then took a sick day, then was fired about eight seconds before I could resign. I remember the shouting matches, the 'five years of economics' Gulia yelled that she had (why change accountants so often?), the lack of HR, the mardy receptionist, and the way one member of staff seemed to have her own personal fiefdom (and sat with the editorial team for some reason) and once had a stress ball thrown at her (by the sales manager, if memory serves). If I had had the gumption I would have gotten the thrower sacked but I shrugged and decided to leave. This was especially true after the magazine I had been working on for three months was pushed back to January, with two articles dropped to make room for adverts. At that moment I felt the smallest I had ever been. Don't even get me started on the boredom and tedium of the actual magazine. Go look at the Samedan website too and laugh!