Pros
4-day working weeks Laptop and AirPods Paid gym membership within a certain limit Mental health support (allegedly provided although never communicated)
Kontras
My time at Search Intelligence was thankfully short-lived, and I was fortunate to secure a better opportunity that allowed me to move on quickly. This company seems too good to be true and that's because it is. I strongly encourage prospective applicants not to dismiss the consistent themes in the reviews below. The patterns of dysfunction described are real, and they closely reflect my own experience. Perks vs. Reality Yes, the company offers above-average perks: a four-day week, modern equipment, and promises of paid gym membership. But these are ultimately recruitment tools, designed to attract talent while masking an unhealthy and unsustainable working environment. Behind the enticing benefits lies a culture that treats employees, particularly juniors, as expendable. Workload & Onboarding You’re told you'll manage a maximum of five or six clients as a junior, but the reality hits fast. Within weeks, you’re juggling 10–15 of the agency’s most challenging accounts and the CEO frames this as ensuring staff have enough to do, but in truth, it stems from aggressive onboarding targets and a lack of sustainable infrastructure. There is little regard for proper training, realistic ramp-up periods, or long-term employee success. Backlogs & Blame Culture Overstretched middle management struggles to cope with overwhelming workloads, and essential tasks routinely slip through the cracks. When this happens, the blame is pushed down to junior staff and rarely upward to sales, leadership, or structural failings. Expect abrupt Slack messages demanding explanations, with no acknowledgement of the impossible expectations or disorganised processes. Many of the middle managers are talented PR professionals, but it’s clear the culture has taken its toll. It was disheartening to see formerly enthusiastic people lose morale and energy. These individuals were a source of early inspiration, but over time, the internal strain meant we had to chase them just to move our work forward – often to avoid being penalised ourselves. Upper Management As the CEO proudly states, many of the senior leaders started as juniors within the company - quite literally walking out of university into the roles. Unfortunately, the result is a senior team lacking the professional or emotional maturity and broader experience needed to create a psychologically safe or strategically sound environment. Feedback is inconsistent, passive-aggressive, and frequently delivered with an undertone of distrust. In Response to the CEO’s Glassdoor Replies Given the CEO has chosen to publicly criticise former employees in his responses, I’d like to offer a few points in return: The tone of these replies is consistently condescending, defensive, and dismissive, with little to no self-reflection on leadership or organisational practices. Potential applicants, take note. The constant emphasis on “top performers” is used to shut down criticism, rather than explore whether the system itself might be failing others. This “winners vs. losers” mentality creates a toxic environment where struggling staff are shamed, and not supported. Labelling negative reviews as “false” or “unethical” is inappropriate and borders on gaslighting. It suggests that only glowing feedback is welcome. Very Trump-esque and hardly a sign of a healthy or progressive workplace. While the company claims to prioritise mental health, the tone and content of the CEO’s public responses actively undermine this. Genuine care isn’t expressed through perks alone; it requires empathy, listening, and trust. Also, mental health support was never actively shared as a perk with the team, who I'm sure would welcome the knowledge they can access help. There is no ownership or acknowledgement of systemic issues, just blame placed squarely on the individuals who didn’t “smash their targets. For those agency owners who idolise this company and try to emulate its practices, please do not be fooled by the glossy LinkedIn posts and cringe marketing videos. I cannot understate the negative impact working here has on its employees.