Pros
None that I can think of
Cons
Terrible Management and horrible culture
Pros
I’ve been working at Allied Maker for six years, during which I’ve had the opportunity to wear many hats. From studio operations and shipping & logistics to client communication, procurement, and human resources, I’ve experienced this company from multiple perspectives. This has given me a deep appreciation for how the business operates and grows. One of the things I value most about working here is the opportunity for professional development. As I’ve taken on new responsibilities over the years, I’ve also been trusted to train and mentor others. Being part of a young and evolving company means there’s still flexibility in defining roles. When there’s a need that aligns with your skill set, it’s easy to have a conversation with ownership about creating a position that benefits both you and the company. The work culture at Allied Maker is collaborative and innovative. Walking through the production floor, it’s common to see team members from different departments working together to meet shared goals. At the same time, each department operates with a high degree of autonomy. Managers are deeply familiar with their roles, care about the development of their teams, and actively advocate on their behalf. Ownership is passionate about the design process and committed to producing high-quality work. Workflow processes are regularly refined to reduce production delays and improve the installation experience for clients. Overall, I’ve felt supported in my personal and professional growth at Allied Maker. I enjoy the people I work with and take pride in the product we create. I’d recommend Allied Maker to professionals looking for a place where they can contribute meaningfully and see the tangible results of their work each day.
Cons
Like any fast-paced environment, priorities can shift quickly. While that presents challenges, especially around communication, it requires a consistent effort from leadership to meet this need. They’re open to feedback and actively encourage ongoing dialogue, though responses can sometimes be delayed due to the demands of a full production schedule.
Pros
A masterclass in how not to run a company
Cons
This company is what happens when leadership is completely out of touch with reality and refuses to acknowledge it. They don’t understand how to run a modern workplace, and it shows everywhere; high turnover, unhappy customers, and employees who are burnt out and fed up. This isn’t a rough patch, it’s a pattern. The way employees are spoken to is consistently disrespectful. The tone from the top is condescending, dismissive, and at times outright degrading. Over time it becomes very clear you’re not viewed as a person or even a valued employee; you’re just easily replaceable. There’s no real effort to build people up, only to point out what’s wrong or not good enough. Feedback is a complete waste of time. Feedback isn’t discouraged; it’s just completely useless. Leadership doesn’t listen they assume they already know the problem (they don’t), and any attempt to bring up real issues gets brushed aside. You’re not there to be heard, you’re there to fall in line. There is no real HR presence, and that’s not by accident. The lack of HR isn’t an oversight; it’s convenient. It allows behavior that would never fly in a functional company to continue unchecked. Policies change whenever it suits them, communication is inconsistent, and there’s no accountability when things are handled poorly. The raise process is one of the clearest examples of how little respect there is for employees’ time. Instead of having a direct, professional conversation, you’re dragged through a long, drawn-out process that leads nowhere. You’ll spend more time waiting for an answer than they spent considering it. By the time you get a response, you’ve already stopped expecting one and you’re usually right. Work ethic means nothing here. You can put in long hours, take on extra work, and carry more than your share, and it will either go ignored or be criticized. Going above and beyond just resets the baseline with no recognition. Meanwhile, people who consistently do the bare minimum or show up late, face little to no consequence. That tells you everything you need to know about what’s actually valued. Turnover is extremely high, and it’s not hard to see why. A large portion of the workforce has left in a relatively short time, and many of those roles aren’t even replaced. When the same problems keep coming up, it’s not coincidence, it’s the culture. Another pattern worth calling out: whenever a negative review is posted, you can almost guarantee a company-wide message will follow shortly after. Like clockwork, it shows up trying to “set the record straight,” claiming this is a great place to work, that everyone is treated like family, and that compensation is more than fair. And the claim that employees are well compensated doesn’t hold up when you look at how people are actually treated or why so many of them leave It would almost be funny if it wasn’t so disconnected from reality. The people writing those messages come across as completely unaware of what employees actually deal with day to day. Instead of addressing anything, they go straight into denial and try to overwrite reality with a version of the company that simply doesn’t exist. What makes it worse is how predictable it is. A negative review goes up, and instead of accountability, employees get a polished message telling them everything is great. It’s not reassuring it’s insulting. It assumes people won’t notice the gap between what’s being said and what they experience every day. Every so often, there are attempts to boost morale; raffles, small perks, things like that but it completely misses the point. People don’t leave because they didn’t win something. They leave because they’re burned out, underpaid for the amount of effort they put in, and tired of being treated like they don’t matter. These gestures feel more like a way to make leadership feel good than to actually fix anything. If you’re thinking about working here, read the one-star reviews carefully. The same issues come up again and again for a reason.
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