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Keeping Current Matters

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A Truly Great Place to Work - Anonymous employee Keeping Current Matters Employee Review

5.0
13 Feb 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It's a for-people place to work that views it's employees needs as a top priority and actually lives out its core values every single day Everything is growth oriented, from the business to individual opportunities, and everyone can build their own path The crew is filled with people who take what they do seriously, but don't take themselves seriously Practicing open/real communication means there's nothing off the table for discussion

Cons

This culture is not for everyone, as it takes work to contribute to (not just consume) In-office work min. 4 days a week isn't for everyone If you can't lead yourself, you'll have a tough time keeping up Expectations are high for everyone, from entry level to senior management

Explore other reviews about Keeping Current Matters

5.0
11 Apr 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

everything about this place is amazing

Cons

can't think of a single con of working at KCM

1.0
8 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Many of the individual contributors and lower-level employees are talented, supportive, and genuinely good people to work with. - The pace and workload forced me to learn quickly and develop new skills, often outside my formal job description. - If you are highly self-directed, resilient, and willing to figure things out on your own with minimal guidance, you may experience personal growth. (That growth, however, comes from necessity rather than intentional investment by leadership*)

Cons

When asked about how to handle work-life balance in an employee "ask me anything," meeting, the current VP of Research & Content Strategy said "there's no such thing." - Leadership consistently demonstrates poor strategic judgment and lack of accountability. - Significant spending decisions—such as investing heavily in a large office space—were made shortly before mass layoffs, signaling serious misalignment between leadership priorities and employee well-being. - Communication from senior leadership is minimal, inconsistent, and often lacking transparency, especially during periods of uncertainty. - Employees are frequently overloaded with responsibilities well beyond their job scope, without adequate compensation, recognition, or support. - The culture places the burden of “making it work” on employees while leadership remains disconnected and inaccessible. - Layoffs were handled in a way that felt impersonal and dismissive, reinforcing a broader pattern of leadership detachment.

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