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Rule29 Creative

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Rule29 Creative Reviews

4.4

69% would recommend to a friend

(14 total reviews)

69% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

14 reviews
4.0
2 Mar 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Having worked with Rule29 for 4 years, here are my positive key takeways. You were able to receive medical/dental, 4% 401K employee match, and vacation as soon as you started. Throughout the year, you found out that they offered Friday summer hours where you get off early to spend time with family, Christmas–New Years Holiday break, and your birthday off. People you work with are talented and become great friends with right away. The design work you do on a day-to-day basis is different and grows your knowledge/skills so you can get where you need to be. Outside of work, they give you resources to help you grow on a personal life level and on special circumstances may give you fully remote status.

Cons

Throughout the years I worked there and looking back at it all, here are my cons. The pay for the work done is mediocre, not competitive, and zero transparency on how much you can make if you continue to work there. Growth within the company is very slow and lack of initiative to help you get there. Medical/dental benefits are okay as a single person but really expensive for a married couple. Diversity of people is very rare and it seems that they hire people who fit the same standard. Outside of day-to-day client work, you get tasked to take on more responsibility such as initiatives and advisor presentations which makes it a bit overwhelming at times. Employees have a hard time communicating their thoughts and opinions to leadership/HR because it is a family owned-operated business.

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Rule29 Creative Response
4y
Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts and experiences you had at Rule29. We appreciate the feedback and have read it all as well as shared it with the leadership and advisors for R29. Many of the items you highlighted we have either been working on, are in process, or we have a different opinion on. We are a family-owned business that has strived for the last 20+ years to be an excellent firm in how we run internally as a team and how we deliver to our clients. Some of the items highlighted we will not have as a small agency, like an HR department, but we do have a process on how to communicate concerns inside and outside the org. Concerning career development, we have a process for as well and we will do a better job to make that more clear as well as getting quarterly input how we can continue to evolve.
3.0
24 Jun 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fresh and eager, right out of design school, this job was an absolute dream come true for me. I was thrown into a fast pace, collaborative, energetic environment. The designers I worked with were so talented and eager to help me learn, grow, and I attribute most of my knowledge and skills to them. Rule29 is an amazing place for a designer right out of school to go and learn and thrive for about 2–3 years. After that, they need more, and a place that treats them better. The creative work is high quality and something I have always been SO proud of! The solutions and work we do are authentic and high level. The portfolio you build here is impressive, and you will have no trouble advancing your future career.

Cons

There is a huge lack of motivation to grow, especially when there is no incentive and you aren’t rewarded for the positive growth you are showcasing. Promotions usually have to be asked/argued for, simply because they do not want to pay you more and would rather replace you with a completely new hire. Management is poorly run. Leadership is absolutely blind to the consequences of a family-run business. There is no accountability with decisions, finance, operations, because multiple people are related. Despite countless feedback (over many years) of management’s toxicity, nothing changes. Employees are told to “just be transparent” and come to them with issues (which leads to being poorly mistreated by operations and anyone related to the family business), but management refuses to hire on HR to remedy ongoing problems within the company. Calling a business “family” is an obvious red flag. It blurs the lines between work & life, leads to frequent guilt-based manipulation, insinuates unrealistic expectations, and promotes an unhealthy, toxic work environment. As a designer, you are micromanaged and not trusted. Every minute is tracked, and you are told to update operations daily with information that they already have. As a result, time is wasted, often with solutions that management implement without enough context to compensate for others not doing their jobs. Management is insecure in their own decision making. They often inundate employees with surveys of C-suite-level-decisions, while never hearing or acting on the quality feedback.

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Rule29 Creative Response
3y
Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts about your time at Rule29. We are not aligned with most of what you shared and find this out of step with the majority of the experiences team members have had over the last 22 years. Nonetheless, we have read and shared your thoughts with the entire leadership team.
1.0
28 Mar 2022

Do Better.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The creative team members are some of the most talented designers I've had the pleasure of working with. They have a hunger for growth and knowledge that makes sharing skills and inspiration come really naturally. The accounts team is super good at what they do. They're always open to help and talk through client feedback, making them a lot more collaborative than account leads may be in other agency settings.

Cons

The company culture is promoted as "family-like", which is just a guise for a lack of boundaries, nepotism, and manipulation. The company CEO and CFO are husband and wife, and the COO is the CEO's sister. These three go through title changes more than anyone else at the company, all of which hold no meaning (ex. Chief Evangelist, Chief Accountability Officer). A lot of their clients are "buddies" of the CEO, and there is very little push-back when scope creep, inappropriate comments, or a lack of professionalism occurs. There was an instance where one of these clients made a sexist comment to an account lead and the situation was just brushed off. As an employee, you will be asked to contribute to an exorbitant amount of required extracurricular work. You will be placed into an initiative group (Process, Culture, or B-Corp), and be expected to come to the table with ideas of how the company can promote itself within these areas. You won't be asked which one you'd like to join and they are absolutely mandatory. These initiatives fall outside of your billable workload but are given the same weight and priority. This often means working outside of work hours to make sure they get completed. There are too many non-productive, mandatory meetings. - Every Monday morning, for a half-hour, everyone meets to, whether you're comfortable or not, share details about your weekend. - Every Tuesday morning, for one hour, you either share your progress within your aforementioned initiative group or in-progress client work. - Every Wednesday morning, for a half-hour, the creative team meets to discuss process changes or address their struggles. This speaks to the lack of boundaries and regard for their employees' time. The company pays annually to certify itself as a B-Corporation while doing very little to adhere to the ethical standards expected of one. Whether it is inconsistent follow-through on policy from leadership, a complete and utter lack of diversity when it comes to employees and clientele, or wavering ethics when it comes to who they do work with, there is a lot of misalignment with the company's values and the values of most B-Corps. Their badging as a B-Corp alongside their, at times, tone-deaf "socially-conscious" social media posts ultimately feels like performative activism. As stated above, there is a severe lack of diversity within the team. There were many new hires during my time with the company and only one was a person of color. We were told that there would be efforts around more diverse hiring practices, but it became readily apparent this wasn't a goal when almost every new hire was white. It's very unclear why they wouldn't advertise themselves as such, but this is a Christian organization. There is a reference to scripture within the decor of the office and most, if not all, of their pro-bono or near-free work, is for religiously-affiliated organizations. This isn't inherently negative, but if they are truly trying to attract a more diverse hiring pool, they should reevaluate how they present themselves and work more towards helping disadvantaged groups directly. The annual review process is lazy and an excuse for senior leadership to not be involved in the day-to-day or get to know the people who report to them. A random selection of 3-4 team members is chosen and sent a link to a Google Survey and are asked to evaluate the team member across a variety of criteria. Ultimately, your peers' unfiltered, nonconstructive, personal opinions of you will determine whether you're eligible for promotions. There is an incredible lack of trust at the company and it's very apparent that they would rather mire and bog down their employees, especially the creatives, with overbearing processes instead of giving them room to fail and grow or develop their own creative process.

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Rule29 Creative Response
4y
Let us first say thank you for your feedback. We have looked at the variety of input you have shared and are or have looked at our policies, approaches, etc., and are committed to making changes where there needs to be and/or that align with our values as an organization. We realize that as a small business we may not be the right fit for everyone and as a B Corporation, we are committed to evolving wherever we can to be the best creative agency we possibly can be. We wish you the best of luck and thank you for your time at Rule29.
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Glassdoor has 15 Rule29 Creative reviews submitted anonymously by Rule29 Creative employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Rule29 Creative is right for you.