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Elemental Impact

Is this your company?

Marketing heavy - Senior Manager Elemental Impact Employee Review

2.0
30 Apr 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You learn about marketing and communication from the experts in the team. Most people have these skills. If you dont, you arnt going to thrive here. Doesnt matter how good you are at something else.

Cons

If you dont have excellent marketing or communication skills, you arnt going to thrive here. Doesnt matter how good you are at everything else.

Explore other reviews about Elemental Impact

5.0
9 Oct 2025
Anonymous intern
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Paid internship/fellowship that I would recommend to any student! While the program is mostly undergraduates, I still found it incredibly valuable as a graduate student and had an amazing experience with my placement organization (which extended my internship beyond the summer and offered me a contract position a year later!).

Cons

A lot depends on your placement, but I did not hear any negative experiences from my cohort of 15

1.0
2 Feb 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The organization attracts talented, thoughtful, and mission-driven professionals. Many colleagues were collaborative, deeply knowledgeable, and personally committed to the work. The portfolio companies and projects offer exposure to complex, real-world challenges across energy, infrastructure, and climate, providing a strong learning environment. In its external posture, Elemental is generally founder-friendly, with teams that aim to be responsive, supportive, and constructive partners to portfolio companies.

Cons

Elemental presents itself as an organization rooted in climate impact, community, equity, and access. During periods of political and financial pressure, those commitments were not consistently reflected in organizational decisions. Following anticipated federal budget constraints after the 2024 election, approximately half of the team—and later the entire partnerships function—was eliminated on short timelines, with limited advance notice and minimal communication regarding process, transition planning, or support for affected staff. During the same period, references to diversity, equity, inclusion, and community were removed from team names, roles, and internal structures without prior communication. Work developed over multiple years was discontinued. Relationships with partners were ended on compressed timelines, in some cases without clear explanation or formal closure, which disrupted continuity. Internally, the organization operates in a highly centralized and hierarchical manner. Decision-making authority is concentrated within the C-suite, supported by a comparatively large layer of senior leadership. Professional stability and influence appear more closely tied to proximity to executive leadership than to execution or demonstrated impact. Individual contributors experienced limited job security and decision-making authority.

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