Pertains only to Singapore office - Anonymous employee Allison Employee Review

1.0
30 May 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company as a whole has good ethos and cares about employees. Good benefits like unlimited vacation and you get to leave a few hours earlier on the last Friday of every month.

Cons

Working in the Singapore office is very draining. Not so much from the work itself but from constantly having to put up a fake rah-rah front. The leader surrounds herself with sycophants and if you have a different opinion or a different way of doing things from them, you will have to put up with needling comments, or worse, be labelled as uncollaborative or unenthusiastic. I left because I didn't learn anything at all. The leadership only knows and does traditional PR, and is not at all equipped for what our changing industry requires.

Explore other reviews about Allison

5.0
31 Oct 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Collaborative culture: Colleagues are generally supportive and willing to help, creating a team-oriented environment. Exposure to global clients: Opportunity to work with major brands and diverse industries across markets. Fast-paced learning: Great place to build strong analytical, media, and communications skills early in your career. Visibility and impact: Analysts often contribute to real client deliverables and strategic discussions. Smart leadership: Many senior leaders have deep PR and marketing experience and are open to mentoring. Hybrid flexibility: Depending on the office, there’s flexibility with work-from-home arrangements. Strong reputation: Being part of a respected global communications firm adds credibility and career growth potential. Professional development: Access to internal trainings, webinars, and cross-team learning opportunities. Creative environment: Encourages new ideas and innovative approaches to storytelling and data-driven PR. Global network: The chance to collaborate with colleagues from different regions and learn from varied perspectives.

Cons

Fast-paced and demanding: Workloads can be heavy at times, especially around client deadlines or new business pushes. Limited work-life balance: Like many agencies, long hours or weekend work can occasionally be expected.

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Allison Response
5mo
Thank you for your thoughtful and balanced review. We are pleased to hear that you have experienced the collaborative culture, exposure to global clients, and hands-on learning that we strive to provide, especially early in one’s career when growth, visibility, and mentorship are most important. While demands can vary with client needs, we continuously seek ways to support our teams, encourage flexibility, and promote sustainable working practices.
1.0
28 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are still talented people inside Allison, and the agency has a strong legacy, credible client history, and smart work to build from. At its best, Allison attracted entrepreneurial, creative, collaborative people who cared deeply about the work, the clients, and each other.

Cons

Allison feels like a shell of what it once was. The spark that made the agency special has been stripped away: the entrepreneurial culture, pace, innovation, willingness to challenge old models, and the energy that once made people proud to build there. The agency has also lost sight of a basic truth: an agency is only as good as its people. What once felt like a culture built around talent, trust, professional development, and shared ambition now feels driven entirely by numbers. People are treated less like the engine of the business and more like line items to be managed. That shift has changed everything. The agency has taken a giant step backward in how it defines its offerings, develops talent, and defines what makes it different. Senior leaders are more focused on self-preservation than on building a strong future for the agency, its people, or its clients. There are still good people there, but the culture no longer feels entrepreneurial, innovative, or people-centered. It feels like a company managing decline with no clear path forward.

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