Pros
Variety of work is encouraging, with possibilities of building a diverse portfolio from content created in many mediums: social media, radio and TV ad scripts, e-Blasts, blogs, and website copy/design. The types of clients is also a plus, given the opportunities to work for various kinds of businesses. There are at least three people who work there who absolutely love it and can't get enough.
Cons
What's most disturbing is that many punitive actions are enacted on employees without any clear explanation of HR policy. There is literally no HR, and no employee handbook or orientation to boot. Rules seem to simply be invented as needed, and then punishment is doled out through email, sometimes publicly. The variety of clients is a positive, as noted above. However, all clients are the lowest rung iteration of a business in their respective fields. Seems manageable enough, except try explaining 21st century strategy to an organization stuck in the 1980s. The same holds true of the agency itself. Their invented, inflexible policies seem straight out of the highly corporatized 80s. Much of the work can be performed remotely, yet one minute of tardiness in arriving to the brick and mortar location is a cardinal sin for which an employee is docked vacation time. Yes, you read that correctly; as corroborated by other reviews here, small amounts of tardiness (5 minutes, for instance) are recorded meticulously and subtracted from employees' vacation allotment. This in spite of the office's setting in the most traffic-laden part of Houston, home to some of the worst traffic congestion in the country. Did a pipe burst in your house this morning? Get stuck behind an accident on 610? Better reschedule that trip to visit your relatives over Christmas, since you'll be docked vacation time for having dealt with an emergency. But, of course, you wouldn't be taking that trip anyway because, during the holidays, in order to ramp up high volume sales for retail clients, salaried employees, who are already intensely underpaid, are required to stay hours late and work on the weekends with no extra compensation. While I worked here, I saw friends who worked elsewhere roll into their office casually at ~10:00 and, when they got their work done, no one cared. At Versa, if you don't arrive by 8:59 and leave any earlier than 6:01, you've signed a suicide note with regards to internal promotions or even basic respect from management. I have friends who work in successful ad agencies where workplace creativity and fun are prioritized. Here, following arbitrary orders is most important. It is, as another reviewer mentioned a fairly painless process to get hired at Versa. It's no wonder; if turnover is intensely high and there's a revolving door of hirings and firings, it makes sense to make the hiring process as easy as possible. You just have to ask yourself: do you want to work at a "creative" agency that's mired in traditional, obsolete business practices or would you rather take your talents, as so many of us have, somewhere else?