Private equity that will never pay you. - Marketing LeadVenture Employee Review

1.0
13 Jul 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working at home and decent time off. Coworkers are kind and go out of the way to help each other.

Cons

Owned by private equity that will buy up 5 companies a year but you have to be happy with a 2% raise at best. They use the flex PTO to pin you in and will never give you a decent raise beyond what you start at. There is no room for advancement and if you do advance, it keeps you from getting a raise for a year. Buying up other companies, smashing the products into a worse option while leaving you to defend the price increases to your loyal customers who feel shafted with 0 back up from management.

Explore other reviews about LeadVenture

5.0
22 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I’ve had a very positive experience working at LeadVenture. The culture is collaborative, supportive, and focused on continuous learning and growth. Leadership encourages innovation and gives employees opportunities to contribute meaningful ideas and take ownership of their work. One thing I especially appreciate is the emphasis on professional development and teamwork. Colleagues are approachable, knowledgeable, and genuinely willing to help each other succeed. The company also does a good job of adapting to change and encouraging new ways of thinking. I would recommend this company to professionals looking for a place where they can grow their skills, collaborate with talented people, and make an impact.

Cons

Like any organization, there are areas that could continue to improve, particularly around prioritization and communication during fast-moving initiatives, but overall the environment is motivating and rewarding.

1.0
22 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Paid time off, work from home, the people at the Canton NY branch are great.

Cons

LeadVenture corporate does not value their employees and off shores or eliminates important roles at their brands without having any real understanding of what that's going to do to their ability to operate. Multiple years with no raises. Developers are handed constantly changing priorities where important projects are left unfinished for a more important project which is left unfinished for a more important project ect. You will feel like you have no job stability and it's probably wise for you to feel that way. The CEO once mentioned in a company wide meeting that the company's only profitable brands were it's newest acquisitions, which is an interesting way to tell everyone that the longer you manage a company the less profitable it becomes. Zero attempt to preserve existing company cultures at acquired brands, that mixed with everything else means terrible employee satisfaction. They do not care for their customers at all, a major source of culture clash with our company pre-aquisition where customer service and reputation was a particularly strong point. I can only imagine they've tanked our previously stellar net promoter score which again hurt employee satisfaction.

3
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