Prestige Can’t Mask the Toxicity
Pros
– Impressive client roster – A handful of caring, mission-driven colleagues – Opportunities to do high-stakes work for marquee brands
Cons
Edelman’s reputation may dazzle on paper—with its global reach, high-profile clients, and industry clout—but behind the curtain lies a culture that is uniquely toxic and deeply demoralizing. People who’ve thrived in fast-paced, high-stakes environments come here and burn out—not from the client demands, but from a leadership culture that routinely treats its people with performative concern and demoralizing actions. At Edelman, the company values are almost comically disconnected from reality. Layoffs are never pretty but Edelman’s tactics are pretty brutal. Here’s how that works: employees are told during a company-wide call that if they’re “impacted”, they’ll be notified within 30 minutes. Then you literally await your fate. One particularly egregious example: a high-performing VP—by all public company metrics—was laid off the day before he was set to close on a new home, while his wife was expecting their first child. No warning. No dignity. Just a reminder that no amount of success will shield you from leadership’s arbitrary decisions. While there are a few genuinely good people here—colleagues who care deeply about the work and each other—the punitive nature of speaking up for yourself or your teams takes its toll amongst junior staff who are the underpaid, overworked proletariat. Bonuses, raises and promotions are rare and routinely go to those who manage up, not those who actually deliver. Toxic behavior from senior leads is not only tolerated but often rewarded. The Boy’s club aka bromance is alive and well. If you’ve heard whispers about the culture at Edelman, believe them—and then imagine worse. It’s a firm that wants to be seen as best-in-class, but internally, it operates on fear, disingenuous platitudes, and a revolving door of talent too exhausted to stay. Cons: – Deeply toxic management culture – Repeated, inhumane layoffs – Lip service to employee well-being – Low pay, high burnout – Bonuses and raises are rare and arbitrary