Symphony Talent Reviews

3.3

58% would recommend to a friend

(238 total reviews)
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Kermit Randa

54% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

Symphony Talent has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 238 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Symphony Talent employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

238 reviews
2.0
8 Jul 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There was a lot of good things that happened to me while at Symphony Talent. I grew exponentially in my client-relationship, presentation and time-management abilities. These are intangible skills that I will take with me the rest of my life, both personally and professionally. I had the privilege of having not one, but two excellent bosses. Both were advocates for work/life balance and pushed me to be more creative and free-thinking in my role. I had an incredible team, one of the 'best I ever had'. People who will hopefully be my life-long friends regardless of distance. The unlimited vacation policy allowed me to go on three different two weeks vacations during my tenure with (relatively) low stress about my absence. 'You only live once: That's the motto.' I feel fortunate to have been on a team that supported that work hard, play hard lifestyle. And yet...

Cons

Started from the bottom now we're... still on the bottom. There's a reason I left. Or rather, there's several reasons. Let me tell you something about the Content Marketing team. Not ONLY were we one of the fastest, most efficient teams in the game (see: last name ever, first name greatest) with the resilience of a rubber band and the witty and uplifting banter of a particularly well-done Amy Sherman-Palladino episode, but we also pushed other teams at ST toward success as well. We formed committees to improve upon our organizational, management, analytics and creative work to aid not only our personal goals but also company goals. During my time at ST, we organized guest speakers from other teams to learn about their specialities, aided the creative team in several trainings both on content marketing and organizational processes, sent out weekly informative emails about the latest content marketing trends and worked to continually come up with new ideas internally as well as for our clients. Simply put, WE CARED. And it showed. We were consistently among the top givers and receivers in our weekly recognition platform and we were proud to be doing something for ST even if it wasn't recognized in a public manner. I was proud to be on this team. I was excited for my future at this company. So what changed? Well, where do I start? Let's start with the fact that our VP left and was never really replaced. We stopped having a real advocate for our team. We had a "kind of" boss. We stopped having a real voice. Still, we pushed forward. Then, we had a team of 5 coordinators removed from our team and then had their work handed back to us (temporarily, we were told). Guess what? My team is still doing that work six months later. Then, in a plot twist similar to the Red Wedding, our company switched to 'regions' and most of us were forced to leave clients we had launched ourselves and had very close relationships with, to learn a whole new set of clients (I had to learn 4 new clients and lost every single other one) in a period of basically a month and a half. It was like being forced to drink from a career-related fire hose when all we wanted was a tiny sip from a Pamplemousse La Croix. We fell into a system of grinding to get the work done, keeping our head above water and losing creative, strategic thinking in place of frustration, anger, confusion and ultimately, burnout. We had a pretty good OOO schedule when we were a real team. Everyone covered everyone else so there was a more balanced workload when people took time off. With the new system, everyone only has one backup. Right now, the south team has no backups to my knowledge. This new system was set up with literally no respect to this team. There is no growth for the Content Marketing team at this time. There is only survival. Beyond that? How about layoffs in the middle of the night, your CEO getting on a call to tell your team that if you go on vacation you should prepare to work 70 hour weeks AND having core values passive aggressively thrown around to bully people to put their head down and get back to work? Don't believe me? Check out the comment from our 'people success team' on a review below about how the 'content marketing team champions the work life balance'? Yeah. How's this for championing? I literally left without a job because I couldn't take the toxic culture from our leadership anymore. "Where you movin'? I said onto better things."

1.0
27 May 2018

Never Join This Company

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nothing to share, its a worst company.

Cons

Such a shame company. Its name should not be Symphony Talent rather "Shame Talent". They are playing with employees career. They are creating such a situation where we were left no job. We being Harman employees should have the option to choose the company we want to work, either with Harman or Shame Talent. Thanks to Harman HR, who helped us, by not moving to such a company. The India MD kesavan, it the worse leader ever, in the meeting he showed his motive behind, that too in a bad way. Besides, he is a complete liar, because of him only people will leave. How can be a person be a top have such kind of loose attitude, who doesn't have even the basic ethics.

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Symphony Talent Response
8y
Symphony Talent as an organization is evolving and growing. Every day, our team of multitalented people in various locations globally are working in tandem to create solutions for a wide range of clients. As a part of our growth process, we will regularly evaluate and adjust our business model to best support our changing needs. In the last year, we changed our staffing model in India from a contractor based model to a fully owned ST entity to ensure we have full alignment to drive towards our vision of redefining how brands connect with talent. We understand this may not be aligned with some of the contract team members through Harman. Do know these staffing model changes were thoughtfully evaluated and communicated well in advance with all impacted levels and contractor teams. In line with our #BeAnOpenBook core value at ST, we will continue to maintain open lines of communication. Our leadership teams across all offices globally are committed to truly live and inculcate our core values. The statement made above is unfounded and as an organization, we are categorically denying any truth to this. #CelebrateEachOther #BeAnOpenBook #DareToBeDifferent #ShareInSuccess #FocusOnTalent
1.0
5 Oct 2023

Do you despise work-life balance? Hate your family? Come to ST!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

They changed their brand colors from a horrid neon pink to a less horrid yet still loud purple color.

Cons

Listen. Every organization has its faults. I've never worked somewhere and thought, "This place is perfect." That being said, this is, by far, over the course of my entire professional life, the worst place I have ever worked. There is absolutely no strategic direction at all. Oh, but what about the company culture? If you like feeling like you have to defend every decision you make HOURLY for things far out of your control, then this culture is for you. If you despise family dinners and prefer the taste of cold spaghetti, eaten alone at your kitchen counter, you'll fit right in. I have never met so many combative leaders in my life. There is absolutely zero accountability, and when there's a problem, everyone goes straight to who can be blamed first. I don't think "collaboration" is a word in anyone's dictionary here. Every single person is so overwhelmed. This last round of cuts has been so harsh on the people who are left behind to pick up the pieces. Oh, and you're judged if you aren't sharing your camera at all times, so say goodbye to actually eating lunch or going for a walk, like, ever. Honestly, most people are too busy digging out of the emails in their inbox and never-ending list of to-do's to do that, anyway. At least I'm losing some weight. Malnutrition, shmalnutrition!

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Symphony Talent Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback regarding your experience at Symphony Talent. We acknowledge and hear you. As shared here on Glassdoor recently, we are driving key transformation efforts over the last year to fulfill our vision - Empower every company & candidate to realize their future together. We understand change can be challenging and once again, acknowledge your feedback. We encourage you to share your feedback with the People Success team either directly - whether globally or through our regional leads. As an alternative, you may wish to share your concerns through our internal Hey ST channel (embedded survey within these weekly communications).
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Glassdoor has 253 Symphony Talent reviews submitted anonymously by Symphony Talent employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Symphony Talent is right for you.