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p-value communications

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p-value communications Reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(48 total reviews)

62% positive business outlook

p-value communications has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 48 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The p-value communications employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

48 reviews
1.0
9 Feb 2026

Misaligned Workplace, Visionless, Unaccountable

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I gained valuable lessons that I will carry with me throughout my career: - I learned just how cold and cultureless businesses can be - I witnessed that actions speak much louder than PowerPoint presentations - I discovered that some companies prioritize event aesthetics over basic employee decency - I realized the relief that comes from no longer working in such a toxic, catty environment

Cons

Some key leaders: - Were power-malnourished, (not to be confused with power-hungry) - Consistently prioritized client happiness over company morale (free lunches were a mask) - Enforced policies even if they didn’t adhere to the simplest ones - Acted above being questioned or understood, especially by those lower on the org chart - Disregarded performance reviews, sometimes until the day they drastically shifted roles & responsibilities - giving employees zero time to improve. - Practiced favoritism, addressing sensitivities for some while overlooking the presence of others - Took full-week vacations without notice, leaving employees to fend for themselves…then failed to acknowledge the effects - Insisted on being the main point of contact, even if unreachable. - Micromanaged at random, then disappeared when support was needed; and somehow employees were the ones who gave the poor performance - Discouraged initiative; questions were often responded with “you’re overthinking it.” - In the rare times feedback was provided, it was often dismissive, vague and unconstructive - Gossiped at inappropriate levels, once making a baseless yet damaging accusation toward an employee, over a deliverable not meeting expectations - Extended efforts only to the level of “due diligence,” doing what looked good on paper - Provided lengthy training, which often proved inapplicable in real-world situations - Lacked a clear vision, were closed off to recommendations, then were blameful of the shortcomings. On occasion, they’d present a confident vision far from reality, and again blamed others if not executed properly.

1.0
22 Jul 2025

A Comfortable Holding Pen for People Without Ambition

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- A handful of genuinely smart, hardworking people—though most of them eventually leave - Well-known clients that should make for great work, if anyone there knew how to push it - Predictable hours if your only goal is coasting

Cons

- The much-advertised “high retention” isn’t a sign of excellence; it’s complacency. Many employees have little to no outside agency experience, and it shows. Processes are outdated, ideas are recycled, and mediocrity is treated as the standard. - Leadership avoids difficult decisions to keep everyone “comfortable,” which might be nice if you’re okay with being stagnant—but it’s career death for anyone who actually wants to grow. - Ambition and new ideas aren’t just unwelcome; they’re quietly stamped out. Push too hard for improvement, and you’ll either burn out or be dismissed as “not a culture fit.” - The “culture” is hollow PR. The second a client pushes back, all talk of values or integrity disappears. - Ownership’s political leanings are a bad look for anyone with even a basic grasp of strategic thinking—especially in a field that depends on science, credibility, and public trust. It’s hard to take a communications agency seriously when its leadership openly supports policies that undermine the very industry it profits from.

1.0
17 Apr 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

At least the work was 100% remote and it paid relatively great for the job title and level of experience. The insurance coverage was also pretty good.

Cons

I did not enjoy working here other than the first week of the job, where everyone seemed so welcoming. My manager expected perfection from day 1 but provided little guidance or mentorship. Our weekly 1-on-1s consist of my manager going through every mistake I ever possibly made with little direction on how to improve. I was always anxious about my performance due to constant criticism that was rarely constructive. A missing font size 9 period in the footnote of a slide within a 63 slide deck would lead to an immediate cold call about how I "didn't even bother looking." Between that and constantly being rushed, it left more room for errors, ehich only added on to my frustration and guilt. It was not a good experience working here, especially while I was pregnant, which I did not even feel comfortable disclosing due to the clique-y atmosphere. Medical directors were ridiculing other medical directors in private chats during internal status meetings. I am glad I do not work here anymore, as I was waking up every day with dread and sometimes even anxiety attacks. The sound of my Teams ringtone from all the times my manager would cold call me would send me spiraling, again, during my pregnancy. Aside from that, a senior leadership would bring up sensitive political topics during our weekly chat... which was always uncomfortable.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 48 Reviews

Glassdoor has 49 p-value communications reviews submitted anonymously by p-value communications employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if p-value communications is right for you.