Top talent squandered - Content Writer Animalz Employee Review

2.0
2 Feb 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Filled with great writers and editors to learn from.

Cons

Everything else. The pay is substandard, especially for content writers – the people making the actual product Animalz is selling. Content writers with any experience at all can find better pay pretty much anywhere in the current market. Animalz charges clients a king’s ransom for blogs and articles, but none of that seems to leak down to the writers. That gap is puzzling, until you see how many vice presidents, directors, and managers are stuffed into the company hierarchy. Benefits aren’t great if you’re on your own, and they’re terrible if you have a spouse or dependents. The company is clearly operating on the “hope your spouse has better benefits” philosophy of employee healthcare. The workload is extreme and is getting worse. Animalz used to pride itself on quality work, but the writers these days are given such a massive production goal that quality is noticeably slipping. And by noticeable, I mean the clients are noticing, and are subsequently churning. Worse, writers are scolded like puppies if they fall behind on production, and are said to be “letting down the team.” That management is letting down their team of writers doesn’t come up very often. When writers fall behind on these extreme production goals, work is often outsourced to freelancers who aren’t given the time, prompts, or editing support to create quality material. And so standards fall further. They won’t hire new editors at a rate commensurate with increased clients or workloads, and so standards fall even more. They really do have top talent at this agency, but management isn’t providing the framework to support them. And more of these talented individuals are leaving every day, realizing how much more money (and how much less stress) can be found out in the market right now. Onboarding was never great and appears to be getting worse, with little-to-no training on the 12+ apps the company uses. The internal organization is a mess because of it, with information being kept on random spreadsheets instead of inputted into the appropriate app with a funny animal name. All forms of dissent in the company Slack are quashed as “complaining” instead of addressed. Public call outs are becoming more frequent, where employees who made mistakes are tagged in public Slack channels with passive-aggressive messages. Morale is in the toilet, perhaps rightly so, with an everpresent air of “who is being fired or quitting next.” Lastly, and perhaps most disappointingly, Animalz is one of those companies that puts forward a progressive veneer with nothing behind it, like the storefronts on an Old West movie set. Unlimited vacation days don’t mean much when you get fired after taking them, nevermind that you have to find and coordinate freelancers yourself should you deign to take a couple days off. Which is even more frustrating, since some upper-level positions have very discreetly been given four day workweeks. There’s no true dialog with management, company all-hands meetings are basically recitals for C-Suite business jargon performances, and struggling employees are given little help. For a business based around communication, you’ll find none here.

Explore other reviews about Animalz

5.0
20 May 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working with the best customers, helping them win

Cons

None that come to mind

4.0
22 Dec 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The most recent iteration of Animalz is super focused on driving results and tracking metrics for clients, which is a pretty big change compared to the production-driven iteration of the past. We also have more offerings than what used to be almost strictly 4 posts a month. We're now just as focused on the marketing as we are the content. The writing is just a part of the offering and it's meant to serve the end goal (the client's end goal).

Cons

It's an agency, which means you have to move fast and you have the occasional long night. Weirdly, the worst part of working here is the organized and targeted (sometimes bizarre, sometimes concerning) harassment and continued bullying from former employees, even from those who haven't worked here for over a year (some of them 2+ years). Were the layoffs 7+ months ago tough to be a part of? I'm sure. Tough to witness? Yeah, of course. Poorly handled? Few argue otherwise. But layoffs happen. It's kind of sad to see talented people putting energy into needless harassment instead of their joys and passions. As far as I know, the couple people who stayed on as freelancers have regular work and we have a good working relationship.

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