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Flynt Management Group

Is this your company?

Avoid at all costs - Programming Coordinator Flynt Management Group Employee Review

1.0
3 Dec 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

This company has some great people working there. I made good friends, learned helpful skills, and valued working with my department

Cons

I put in 3 years at this company, first as a captioner then as a programming coordinator. The work is soul-crushing. HQ does not care a single iota about its Boulder office. They went back to in-office work post-COVID despite a majority of employees expressing a desire to remain WFH, and despite a rise in profits during WFH. They don't pay enough and they will do everything in their power to make sure you know you mean nothing to the company. It's a dying company and should be avoided at all costs.

Explore other reviews about Flynt Management Group

5.0
18 Sept 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

pleasant environment, chill workplace and good for experience

Cons

no cons, maybe too low of pay

1.0
5 Dec 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some talented employees genuinely trying to do good work despite the environment. A few departments manage to maintain professionalism even without strong leadership. You’ll gain experience navigating a volatile, unpredictable workplace — if you can tolerate it. Fast-paced environment for those who don’t mind constant change.

Cons

Leadership has a pattern of overstepping into personal boundaries, creating discomfort and eroding trust. HR is not empowered to operate independently; executives often override ethical or best-practice guidance. Internal culture relies heavily on fear, surveillance, and micromanagement rather than transparency or professionalism. There is a striking disconnect between the company’s public stance on free expression and how employees are treated when expressing concerns or maintaining personal autonomy. Communication is inconsistent and highly reactive, with decisions shifting based on internal politics rather than clear policy or legal standards. Employees often feel unsafe raising issues or asking questions due to an unspoken but very present fear of retaliation. Workplace culture prioritizes control over collaboration, leaving employees unsure of boundaries and expectations. Psychological safety is virtually nonexistent; many employees simply stay quiet to avoid becoming a target of leadership’s whims.

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