No chance of growth or promotion basically, but working in the music industry is cool, right?! - Content Manager The Orchard Employee Review

1.0
23 Jan 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Being able to tell you friends you work in the music industry. Helping indie artists monetize pennies of youtube. Pretending you're helping music people. Paid week off between xmas and new year.

Cons

No/hardly a chance of promotion. Selfsatisfied, mediocre management, that are SUPER entrenched. Especially upper management, that do nothing. Tech staff that know not much, and outsource a lot. CTO knows and does nothing all day. Tech team that thinks it's cutting edge, but isn't in any way (just check the product). Many others in senior roles maybe all but one or two, do nothing and know less, unfortunately. The reality of not helping musicians. Being told you will do one thing during an interview, and having to do otherwise. Lots of not very bright people.

Explore other reviews about The Orchard

5.0
30 May 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great schedule, fast-paced, amazing office culture, catered lunch.

Cons

Lots of meetings, interesting building setup.

2.0
30 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You get to work on high-profile projects for major artists in a great NYC office. The environment is flexible, the dogs are a plus, and lunch is catered twice a week. Most of the staff are talented, hardworking, and genuinely nice people. It’s a "cool" place to be on the surface, but the cultural issues (lack of promotions and favoritism) run deep. See below.

Cons

Employee satisfaction plummeted in March 2025 as the fallout from restructuring and layoffs soured the organizational culture. This decline is fueled by high KPI pressure and a lack of clear career progression; even high performers of several years face stagnant growth. Operational efficiency is further hindered by "low-value" work, such as creating pitch decks for clients with a history of non-engagement. Furthermore, a lack of boundaries with demanding clients has led to chronic unpaid overtime. Most concerning is a perceived culture of favoritism, where opportunities and rewards are distributed based on personal bias rather than merit, deeply undermining team morale.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All