THE MANAGEMENT SUCKS!
I don’t usually write reviews like this, but after my experience, I felt it was important to share my honest perspective for anyone considering working with this company.
I spent three years here, and when I started, I genuinely believed I had found a place where I could grow professionally. I put my heart into my work as a video editor, delivered consistently, and even took on tasks that weren’t part of what I was originally hired for. I handled editing, content creation, social media posting, and even responding to messages across multiple platforms—responsibilities that expanded far beyond my actual role.
The problem? The workload increased, the pressure increased, the expectations increased… but the compensation never did. Despite taking on more and more responsibility, there was never any adjustment in salary or acknowledgement that the role had essentially doubled. I kept showing up, doing the work, and hoping that loyalty and initiative would eventually be rewarded. Unfortunately, that moment never came.
What made things even harder was the repeated delays in salary payments. Weeks would pass without proper notice or explanation. Anyone who works for a living knows how stressful that is—bills don’t wait, rent doesn’t wait, and obligations don’t pause just because a company can’t handle payroll on time. That alone created unnecessary mental strain that eventually became impossible to ignore.
I tried to be understanding. I tried to be patient. I tried to be a team player. But at some point, you realize you are giving everything and getting very little in return—not even basic stability. The imbalance between effort and compensation became unsustainable, and it made it impossible to maintain a healthy work-life balance or perform at my best.
Leaving wasn’t easy. I value many of the relationships I built and the skills I gained. But no amount of loyalty can fix a system that doesn’t value your contributions. In the end, I had to choose my own well-being and growth.
I hope this review helps others make a more informed decision. My experience may not reflect everyone’s, but it is my honest account of what happened—and why I ultimately had to walk away.






