Needle Reviews

2.8

40% would recommend to a friend

(60 total reviews)

Morgan Lynch

40% approve of CEO

26% positive business outlook

Needle has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 60 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Needle employee rating is 27% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

60 reviews
4.0
11 Sept 2020

good and flexible

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

work hours are too good and enviroment.

Cons

nothing too much but little bit pressure.

2.0
19 Aug 2016

Good while it lasted

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I worked at Needle for a little over 2 years as a chat specialist for Adidas. It was cool. We got paid per chat, which meant that you could make insane amounts of money an hour if it was busy. I got to make my own schedule, and we got points to use for products at the business we represented. It was nice to be able to work from my computer, anywhere there was an internet connection.

Cons

You had to wake up at 12am pacific time to set the schedule every Friday morning.. which was no good because it was 2am in my time zone. The schedule filled up within 2-3 minutes for the week, so if you don't wake up, you'll miss an opportunity to get good hours. Another issue I came in touch with a lot, was forgetting I had hours to work because of the inconsistent scheduling. We'd be out with friends or we'd make plans, and I'd get an alert that I had to log on in 5 mins to start my hour. If you miss a commit, you are docked a good amount of points, which knocks your standing down in the community, and doesn't allow you the chance for earlier schedule picks. We had a lot of issues with chat routing. There would be 2 or 3 people that would DOMINATE the chats. They would be full to capacity the whole time, while there would be one or two people with one chat, and everyone else at zero. Since we get paid for chats, you can sit there for an hour, and get 1 or 2 chats--- at $1.09 per chat for adidas, it didn't add up to a whole lot. There would be weeks where I worked over 20 hours and barely made $100. Each community had different pay scales too. I used to work for another company with Needle and they got paid $1.30 for committed chats, and $1.10 for freeskate chats. Adidas was $1.09 for committed and under $1.00 for freeskate chats. This being said, you get paid through Paypal and are an independent contractor. So you have to put aside money for your taxes from the paychecks, since it's not automatically deducted. Starting October 2016, Needle is moving to an all points based pay system. Advocates will no longer get paid in cash, but rather, they will only be paid in points. So you can use these points to get "free" gear and items from a whole lot of different brands. But you can't pay bills with points or free items. AND you've still got to pay taxes on these items. You'll now have to find the monetary value of the items you've gotten, and report that for taxes. Basically, I think Needle is going to make away with a whole lot of money in this change. If an advocate takes $50 worth of chats, the company used to have to pay them $50.. but with this new change, if they take $50 worth of chats, needle only has to give them a $50 t-shirt or something of the sort (and we all know how high the mark-up is on clothing and goods). So Needle may only be spending $10 or so to pay someone for $50 worth of work. It was good while it lasted, but now with this change, it's not worth it anymore. I spent too much time trying to snag hours in the middle of the night, or forgetting to do it.. and then i would schedule my day around my work hours, instead of working when I have time. It would cut into my social life and I'd have to skip out on all kinds of things to "make money," when a lot of the time, I would only make a few dollars an hour.

1.0
31 Aug 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Easy money if you work for a team that has steady traffic (but don't count on that, they won't tell you the reality of the situation)

Cons

There are many middle-managers with no actual power and they are terrible at communication and oftentimes very demeaning to contractors. (In response to unanswered questions and concerns) The only business strategy they have seems to be throwing around the word "Rockstar" as many times as possible. I don't say that lightly either, they have some odd reliance on clichéd corporate jargon to make it sound like they know what they're talking about while they beat around the bush. Management intentionally misleads contractors. They will lie about contract status with clients to your face (or rather to your computer). There were (at the time of my leaving) thousands of dollars behind on outstanding awards for contests- some of which were well over a year past due. They promise compensation (or entrance into a contest to win something) if you take part in their hokey marketing techniques but then fail to deliver almost always. They create contests that have no metric of winning, and then leave it in the dust after you played their stupid game for a week straight. They make mention of new levels of certification for contractors and then never mention it again. They'll say they'll review chat transcripts to find someone who performs best and then change the manager for the team and never bring it up again. Morgan Lynch, the founder of the company is also quite bigoted. He has a track record of using demeaning racist slurs and working himself into a bit of a frenzy. Needle attends many conferences to promote themselves and usually include some cringe worthy gimmick to get your attention (paid a flash mob to do a conga line in NYC Winter 2014). They also have contests where you can fill out a contact form or whatever and get a chance at winning a large cruise. The contest is of course rigged and they later discussed which client they had the best chance of getting to sign a contract and were planning on awarding the cruise package based on that. They use the fatal "if there's a problem, fire or move the person causing the problem until someone new and untrained gets it right on the first try" policy of employment, which seems to plague Utah start-ups for some unknown reason. They go through community managers for each brand very quickly and serve all that corporate doublespeak when you try to follow up on why that person left. They remove hours without notice, they hire people to cover hours that they won't give to you (cut from 50 hours/week during holiday to 23 by the spring) also without notice. (ie no one is working weekends [because we're already maxed at 23 hours we can commit to] so we need to hire more people). They tread a very gray area in terms of rights of contractors vs. employees. They don't want you as an employee for tax reasons, but they try to control the method of work of the contractors and have numerous metrics they keep track of and lots of training on how to handle each chat. They also beg you to take 50 hours a week during the holiday season and then when they do cut hours and you raise concern about it they call you stupid for not having a full time job and say this isn't really meant to supply income but is more of a hobby. They avoid putting things in writing- this of course only benefits the company and never the contractor. I've worked on the other side of this type of work and my manager would frequently take over negotiations that I had going by email to talk to them by phone so she wouldn't later have to deliver on what she promises. It's the same thing with Needle. There is micro-management to an insane scale. With even the smallest question for your community manager you'll hear nothing but platitudes until they verify it with their manager etc etc all the way to the CEO. They have no dedication to a healthy corporate culture. They will offer someone a job and ask them to come in to sign the paperwork but that instead turns into a one on one interview with the CEO who only wants bloodthirsty college grads with business degrees so they can grow 100% in a year. (Instead of cultivating culture, dealing with struggling communities/brands, or perfecting their catalog, IT, etc etc system). Their business model relies solely on being a middle-man for brands who want an online interactive chat presence. The idea is good, but they don't do anything that a brand couldn't do on its own (meaning the brand would save money and the contractor would make more). Middle-men business aren't "bad" but they do the absolute minimum required to do what they do- the IT team is desperately slow, their catalog system for contractors is borderline useless and any IT complaints are meant with a run-around/re-wording of your question in non-answer form. Simple scripting problems that would add great improvements to scheduling, chat-taking, etc for the contractor are ignored and dismissed. All of this that I have mentioned is abundantly clear on day 1 but I stayed much longer because it became easy money and the job market isn't great. The best months of the job were the ones after they fired a community manager and ignored the team for several months.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 60 Reviews

Glassdoor has 120 Needle reviews submitted anonymously by Needle employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Needle is right for you.