Playwire Reviews

3.1

51% would recommend to a friend

(123 total reviews)
avatar

Jayson Dubin

49% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

Playwire has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 123 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Playwire employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

123 reviews
2.0
14 Mar 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

** The people who end up getting trapped at Playwire as employees tend to be good people with plenty of ambition and skill. So, the pro here is the people you work with. ** You get benefits, 401K, and a paycheck.

Cons

** Notice: If Glassdoor was to check the IP address of the reviews, they would discover a majority of them come from the same IP - the Playwire IP. There are fake reviews here, as well as fake reviews on the company’s former Glassdoor account, ‘Intergi’. Fake reviews can be spotted from a mile away. Look for 5-star reviews and cheesy lines like, "Put your seat belt on, and get ready for an amazing ride!". No real Playwire/Intergi review would begin like this unless it was sarcasm. The headlines would probably read more like, "Put your seatbelt on, and get ready for an amazing ride, filled with low morale and with short moments of joy!” ** CEO's emotional spectrum is composed of extremes, happy and angry. He can flip between them easily within the same conversation. Prior to approaching him, you must assess where he is on his emotional spectrum and work from there. ** There is no vertical growth, you grow horizontally. As your responsibilities grow, you might get slapped with a new title, however, your pay typically does not reflect the amount of hours you spend working, nor do your sporadically revealed bonuses. ** There is no overtime pay and, yes, you are expected to work extra hours . ** Pay is not amazing. You can be there for three years and not receive an increase in pay. Individuals with the same set of responsibilities, or more, can see less pay as others with the same responsibilities. ** Good people get stuck here. They get comfortable (and they shouldn’t, they are not seen as valued employees, but replaceable peons) and they don’t leave. They are abused and harassed, but they don’t leave. This puts office morale at unbelievably low levels throughout the year. There have been jokes of the office being the perfect environment to show off Stockholm Syndrome. ** There have been jokes of there being 'boys clubs' or 'golden boys'. Typically because favored employees are male. ** When employees do leave (either fired, let go, or give notice), the CEO has been known to request some employees to not send emails out saying that they are leaving. In situations where employees leave silently (one day they are there, the next they are gone) and no one comments on it - not even during company wide meetings. Of course, there have been examples of people leaving, sending emails out, and their leaving being noticed -- typically favored employees. ** CEO has no respect for off hours. Even if it’s 3AM he will email you, usually about something that could be discussed in the office in the morning. ** Middle management is circumvented on every occasion when the CEO sees fit. Typically, this results in processes for a team being changed (and the team ends up suffering 70% of the time due to poor choices) and there is no follow up, simply blame and questioning when things underperform. This is not due to decisions from managers, it is the CEO. ** Praise from the CEO means that you’re on his list and he's paying attention to what you are doing (often times when it is unnecessary and you have been dutifully performing your given tasks). If you are praised, prepare to having him breathing down your neck looking for any signs of weakness in the work you are performing. Sometimes, it comes in the form of blank assaults, guesses, or, sometimes, even lies on some items. Again, this is in place of your manager doing this. ** CEO does not enjoy criticism, nor does he enjoy anyone disagreeing with what he says. ** Females drop like flies from the company. They have been known to run to the bathroom crying, run to their car crying, or simply sitting at their desk crying. This typically occurs after having the CEO disrespect their position by only speaking to the individuals they manage, instead of speaking directly to them about their team. Of course, this has occurred due to circumstances outside of the CEO as well. The majority of the C-level team, save one individual, will greet every individual in the room by name, except the female. ** CEO has been known to turn his back on individuals speaking to him mid-conversation if he does not value their opinion or does not like them. Both male and female employees. ** When upset with you the CEO may not speak to your for weeks. ** CEO will make vague requests for you to improve areas of work. For example, the CEO will request you increase the amount of emails you send. You might believe this to be 15% - 20% more emails, however, whatever you do is typically not enough. If you ask for set milestones of what he would like you to do, you do not get them. Instead, you get pushback. You are set up to fail and it happens a lot - ie. if he says jump, you do not ask "how high" you jump and pray you jump high enough.

1.0
27 Apr 2016

Take the other reviews into consideration

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Coworkers are great. There are perks if you like playing video games or ping pong. Some workers get commission in addition to base salary.

Cons

Where should I begin? This has to be one of the most disorganized places I ever worked. Upper management is abrasive to employees. There were times when an employee was reprimanded in the open by a few management employees. To say that climate and corporate culture there was stressful and unpleasant is an understatement. There are a few departments but they all shared the same issues. There were constant goals and metrics that was unrealistic and did not enhance productivity at all. People would get hired and fired soon after. It didn't matter if a person was a long time employee or someone recent...anyone could get the ax for even the slightest misstep. Because they had a terrible hiring process that was more about hiring clones of the CEO's pet employees, the turnover rate is high. People with sense either quit or get fired for being too much like a reasonable person. There's only one other review for Playwire, but if you type in their former company name Intergi, you'll see that they have had a terrible work culture for a long time. Also, ignore the good reviews that were all left on (or around the same day). That's pretty indicative of how they do business. React instead of innovate. Don't be fooled. There are better companies that will pay you what you're worth and will provide a pleasant work culture for you as well. Pass on this. Trust me.

1.0
2 May 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are plenty of good, vibrant, friendly people; you'll have friends for after you quit or are fired. You'll also get to know your cardiologist as you'll likely need some blood pressure medication from the stress. Let's not forget the benefits of high turnover -- you can rise to a senior position quickly. The building is shared with a gym, so at least you can try to work off all the weight you'll gain from stress and anxiety.

Cons

While there is a CEO (very erratic, emotional, borderline bi-polar), there is no leadership or vision. Corporate goals consist of chasing the latest shiny object. The company demands total and complete loyalty - try taking your time off, or say anything negative, and you'll get complaints or be fired. There is extreme micromanagement and and a lack of self-expression, even in the creative departments. Yet, despite the micromanagement, when you need an actual decision to be made on something substantive, you just won't get one. If you try reaching out to other top-level executives (non-CEO) to attempt addressing any of these issues, you'll be promptly terminated. Despite the sales arm of the organization being over 75% of the company and the product arm less than 3%, the answer to every problem is "hire more sales staff" and "I can do everyone's job" or "you are incompetent". If you value yourself as a human being... please don't work here.

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Glassdoor has 129 Playwire reviews submitted anonymously by Playwire employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Playwire is right for you.