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Unleashed Brands

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Evil Company Destroyed Everything we and hundreds of others had ever worked for - Franchise Owner Unleashed Brands Employee Review

1.0
11 Jun 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You’re no longer afraid of hell because you’ve already met the devil. You never have to worry about anything innovative, because they’re too busy taking you back to the 1950s because they can make more money off of a call-center than decent technology. You’ll learn to read every piece of paper put in front of you because they lie to get you to sign things, and then use them later, to destroy your finances and your business.

Cons

This company collects smaller franchises that used to be built on family values, and passion for working with children, and tears them apart from the inside out. There’s nothing worse than watching everything you’ve ever worked for destroyed by maniacal monsters that laugh after they threaten you with promises of turning you into the next person whose life they’ve destroyed. When other people in my franchise started telling me about the terrible experiences they were having with this brand, I was blissfully, unaware, and very happily ignorant. When it came time for a renewal, I learned how much I wish I had listened earlier. Not only did they threaten me until I agreed to sign a contractual amendment I’ve regretted every day sinse, but they said if I didn’t sign a renewal contract that had so many changes in the terms, then I would no longer be able to make money, and would lose my business, they promised that if I didn’t sign this impossible to sign contract, they would sue me for everything I’m worth if I got another job in the next two years, after losing my business. I had a successful business, and now I’ll have nothing. Three class action lawsuits have been filed against them by three different groups of franchisees in just the last couple years. Dozens of franchisees are currently suing them in secret arbitrations. Every one of their franchise brands has formed an association, and when we just formed ours, They immediately told us that they would turn us into the next The little Gym and Premier martial arts, destroying everything we love in court, until we had nothing left if we didn’t stop. I’ve never been so afraid, nor so broken hearted in my life. They’ve terrorize the Franchise association board members to the point of abject, capitulation and fear. They sent me an email in the last few days bragging about the way they destroyed the life of another franchisee, followed by a call, letting me know that they already destroyed another franchisee in court, and that I would be next. Just two years ago I would’ve told everybody to join our brand, now, I just hope you all know what we know before you get in bed with these terrible terrible people. And while Michael Browning says he went to Texas Christian University and pretends this is a Christian-based organization, their conduct says otherwise - these people are anything but! The people that work at their home office are absolute monsters. Stay as far away as you can. They lie with ease, from what I’ve seen, they commit perjury, and then they take the suffering of others they’ve already destroyed, and use it to scare the rest of us into staying silent.

Explore other reviews about Unleashed Brands

5.0
21 Nov 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Friendly staff, supportive atmosphere, creative environment

Cons

My commute is long, more than 25 miles each way.

1.0
1 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A few talented employees who genuinely care and do their best despite the environment.

Cons

This was easily the most frustrating, disappointing, toxic and dysfunctional organizations I have worked for in my career. The expectations placed on employees were completely unrealistic. Leadership regularly demanded significant growth and results while failing to provide the resources, staffing, budget, or organizational structure necessary to achieve those goals. When goals were missed, the response was often to look for someone to blame rather than address the underlying issues. Management was inconsistent, reactive, and frequently disconnected from the day-to-day realities of the business. Priorities changed constantly, projects were started and abandoned, and employees were expected to pivot repeatedly without clear direction. There was little accountability at the leadership and c-suite level, yet employees were held to impossible standards. The culture was equally disappointing. Instead of collaboration and teamwork, there was a strong undercurrent of office politics, gossip, and self-preservation. Some coworkers appeared more focused on protecting themselves, creating drama, or undermining others than actually working together toward shared goals. Employees who raised concerns or challenged decisions often felt punished, ignored, or treated differently afterward. As a Marketing Director, I was frequently expected to fix problems that originated in other departments. Marketing became the scapegoat for issues that were far outside its control. Successes were often overlooked, while failures—regardless of the actual cause—were quickly assigned to whoever was most convenient to blame. Communication from leadership was extremely poor. Expectations were rarely clear, feedback was inconsistent, and decisions were often made without input from the people responsible for executing them. The result was confusion, frustration, and constant fire-drills. Employee morale suffered because of the lack of trust throughout the organization. Turnover was high, burnout was common, and many talented employees eventually left. The environment often felt less like a professional workplace and more like a political game where relationships mattered more than performance. There are good people throughout the company, but good employees can only overcome so much. Without significant changes to leadership, accountability, communication, and culture, I would not recommend working here. Poor management, unrealistic expectations, blame culture, office politics, vindictive behavior, constant turnover, lack of accountability, poor communication, and employee burnout.

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