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Golden Events Group

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Golden Events Group Reviews

2.8

46% would recommend to a friend

(69 total reviews)
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Kaitlin McGarry

68% approve of CEO

42% positive business outlook

Golden Events Group has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 69 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Golden Events Group employee rating is 25% below average for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

69 reviews
1.0
10 Nov 2016

Scam

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you have no experience, this job will get you sales experience, not a career. Another pro is they give you 1 day off instead of no days off, but your one day off usually means go into a meeting and have them review your sales job and tell you that you need to work harder.

Cons

They will tell you what you want to hear. The owner is trained to tell you the exact things to move you onto the second round interview. In the second round interview they will read off of a script and tell you what you want to hear so you will take the job. The first day the person that did your second round, will meet you for coffee to pre-empt you on all the things they do so you won't question them later. Then, you will go into the office where they will only introduce you to the people that will tell you all the right things to keep you coming back. From there they will teach you the "systems" for marketing where they'll repeatedly tell you that you are only marketing inside a Kroger, not selling, but in fact, you are actually selling the entire time. Then comes time for a meeting. Usually the meeting is really positive and uplifting to motivate you to stand inside of a Kroger for over 8 hours every day. Usually the first week you won't go into the field unless the entire office quits and then they'll disguise it as an opportunity to show your true leadership skills. A typical day for someone who has been working there for a while is be the first one in the office, usually 7:30-7:45am, teach all the systems and answer all of the negative questions about the business and they answer with a spin on it. Go through the meeting, after the meeting you will fill your car up with as much inventory as possible to make are you don't run out and go home early, drive to the Kroger and stand there trying to sell whatever product, usually heat pads and pillows. If you don't sell at least $800 worth of product they expect you to stay late and "go the extra mile" without proper compensation for that extra time. Then you go to mandatory dinners that you pay for, not the company. These dinners usually go until 9:30-10pm and repeat every day. On Saturdays they expect you to be in the office at 7am sharp and work that day until 6-8:30pm with little to no break time. The pay is $8/hour plus compensation only if you have already sold $600 worth of product. The paystubs are vague so you can't really tell if you've been paid properly or not. If you do show up early or stay late they will not compensate you. Everyone here is brainwashed and will try to make you believe that having a 9-5 job is the worst thing in the world. They will try to convince you if you stay with they company you can retire at 30. They make you get on conference calls more than 5x a week during your personal time too. Every Thursday the conference calls are about how they got by screwing people over and saying you can do the same too, but in reality you can't because the practice is too old and the markets are saturated and not to mention people HATE being bothered while grocery shipping. No work/life balance. If you have kids don't apply, if you want to make friends at work don't apply, they don't let you talk to anyone who hasn't been there more than 3 months.

1.0
24 Jul 2015

Good for Few, Bad for Most

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good atmosphere. Kaitlin is a pusher and accepts accountability- she'll give anyone willing to work and grow a chance.

Cons

Deceptive interview process. Pay is awful. Job is really more of a sales job, no matter what pretty words Kaitlin calls it.

2.0
16 Aug 2017

Marketing Associate

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The main pro I can think of is that the position drives you further than I've ever challenged myself. The office energy in the morning is a bit unnerving but aids in feeding everyone to run off and sell, sell, sell. Overall, Kaitlyn has a great strategy for training and sending off her drones to Sam's Club and Costco, wearing nurse shoes or in-soled flats and chugging Red Bulls and Monsters.

Cons

Honesty and Transparency. I probably should have asked further inquisitive questions, however, the process of exactly how each associate will become an executive manager isn't truly explained until you are wearing a business suit or a blazer and slacks, standing while taking notes in the cramped, hot office with walls covered in framed inspirational quotes, successful executive managers and consultants, photos of the staff and white boards to help trainees practice and learn. After two weeks of the training system, you slowly realize that the position isn't a generic do-well-and-get-promoted to train others. To become an executive manager, not only must you complete roughly six to 12 months of "successful" selling of products in Sam's Club and Costco, traveling as far as McKinney and Rockwall (covering the majority of your own travel expenses), but also beginning your two hour morning meeting at 8 am, working at either 11 am or 1 pm, ending around 7 or 8 pm, attend, at a minimum ,2-3 "business dinners" a week, go to weekly book club and morning "one-on-ones" with consultants and other people with more experience than you and just give up your whole life to the program. I would mention to my significant other about their morning "goal circle" to which he referred as the "cult meeting". As I watched the "Leaders" of the company chant their goals, I tried to imagine myself leading these same chants with vigor and enthusiasm and nearly threw up in my mouth. In the end, it wasn't for me. I couldn't lie to and deceit other young people to work for me in my own office. Young people populated the majority of Kaitlyn's office. Golden Events Group's Linkedin job postings are intriguingly vague, yet, still contains enough information to sound legitimate to any recent marketing/management graduate/intern. Climbing up the ladder at GEG equals dedicating your life's work to molding others into product selling machines at Costco, Sam's Club and Kroger; from your own selling success to leading and giving advice in morning meetings and going home to still lead and give advice over phone calls to other offices. If this is something you can picture yourself doing the rest of your life, go ahead and sign up for the job as they will literally hire anybody (and make you feel special as if you were hand-selected out of 50-60 candidates). The end result is incredibly nice (consultants allegedly earn in the millions), however, that end result will take at least 10-20 years. As mentioned before, once you reach that point, you'll still have to give advice and training. I couldn't see myself doing that job for life and became dispassionate. Most of the people there still lived at home, didn't have many bills or had a significant other who took care of them; otherwise that job is not sufficient enough to cover bills while you're trying to move up to "executive manager", especially once you take out food, coffee, business attire and travel expenses. If you have no problem interrupting people while they're shopping and getting shot down at least 30 times a hour, go right ahead and apply there. This company is essentially a no-pay MLM organization, their set-up is a little different in that you're not reaching out to family and friends on Facebook to purchase your products, but bothering people at the store to make an impulsive $50+ purchase at least 10 times a work day, only to earn a paycheck that's roughly $300-$700 (in the interview process, they will tell you the monetary benefits are hourly plus commission, but during orientation, Kaitlyn lets you down by breaking the payment system down further; in actuality, you earn how many hours you worked and ONLY commission that has exceeded the total amount of hourly wages earned. She will also tell you that the company covers travel expenses on days you come in to the office and go to work after, but that is only if you work the 11 am shift. Like I said before, if you don't have any bills to pay or live at home and want to gain some selling experience, go right ahead. This job was not for me and I write this review to serve as a cautionary tale to others.

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Glassdoor has 73 Golden Events Group reviews submitted anonymously by Golden Events Group employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Golden Events Group is right for you.