Summer Internship - Anonymous employee BPCM Employee Review

4.0
14 Nov 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I really enjoyed my summer internship at BPCM's New York office and gained valuable skills and work experience. The environment was for the most part friendly and positive. Employees made an effort to get to know all of the interns and made sure we felt comfortable around the office. Interns work directly with account executives and are assigned daily tasks and responsibilities. As an intern I assisted account executives in the beauty department with maintaining the Beauty closet and sample inventory for all clients, clipping online and print mentions, sending out samples, and drafting basic public relations materials including press releases as well as weekly / monthly press reports. I have gained so much PR experience from this opportunity. I would highly recommend!

Cons

The office staff is often changing due to high staff turnover. There are little employee incentives and the salary is extremely low for entry-level positions in New York City.

Explore other reviews about BPCM

5.0
1 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Team-Oriented, Great Brands, Flexible In-Office Schedule, Clear/Collaborative Avenues for Growth, Human CEOs

Cons

Not a place to coast - high standards, but great opportunity for ambitious, results-driven individuals.

1.0
14 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Big-name clients and good exposure early in your career.

Cons

There’s little to no proper training for people entering agency life. You’re expected to “figure it out,” and then criticized when expectations (that were never clearly communicated) aren’t met. Turnover is extremely high, one team had over 12 people leave in under a year due to disorganization and poor communication from leadership. Instead of addressing issues directly, leadership would often escalate concerns about junior staff to VPs rather than having direct adult conversations. The culture is heavily micromanaged and cliquey. There’s constant gossip and a “game of telephone” dynamic — people talk about you, not to you. You’ll walk into touch bases and get blindsided with negative feedback that was never communicated before. You’re told to “ask questions,” but then made to feel dumb for doing so. Support is inconsistent. Leadership is quick to ask junior employees to step up and provide extra help when it benefits them. But when junior staff ask for additional support, it’s dismissed as “out of scope” or labeled a “low-lift account.” It feels one-sided. HR does not feel like a resource for employees , concerns raised by junior staff are not taken seriously and often seem to favor leadership. There’s little mentorship unless leadership personally favors you. Pay is also extremely low for the workload, especially compared to smaller agencies offering significantly more for entry-level roles. Overall, it felt more like high school than a professional environment.

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