Logos reviews

3.9

77% would recommend to a friend

(101 total reviews)
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Chris Migura

100% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

Logos has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 101 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Logos 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

101 reviews
1.0
May 4, 2016

Not transparent

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great people work at logos with talent

Cons

The company is not honest about payment to its employees.There is no HR department to talk about pay discrepancies. Management avoids putting compensation in writing.

3.0
Jan 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Wonderful people truly invested in the vision of the company. The CEO is a good visionary leader, makes smart moves and the upper-level vision is not only appealing but innovative and exciting. there is lots of freedom built into the company structure.

Cons

Entry level years (1-5) are great. Lots of movement, and you can live with low pay as you build your experience. After you've built up experience, though, don't expect to be paid fairly, with the sole exception of software developers.

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Logos Response
11y
I'm sorry you didn't have a better experience. I think your observation about inconsistent management between departments is correct, and we really worked hard to begin addressing that in 2014, and are continuing to work on it. Your analysis of Marketing is correct, and we've already re-organized and changed our hiring strategy to address that. We had the wrong mix of seasoned and new-to-the-field team members, and we're working to address that. We don't just need 'lots of bodies,' we need more experienced leaders who can help train, support, and grow up the earlier-in-their-career team members. We're getting there. We aim to pay market wages. We compare our salaries by position to published stats, and the market itself tells us if we're off: if we're offering too low, it's hard to hire and people leave. I don't know the circumstances that led to your being told you were at the top of the range, though it's believable. We do have ranges for some jobs, and sometimes people need to move up to a different position to make what they want to. I'm sorry I didn't get a chance to discuss this with you before you left. (If we are paying below market, I'd rather hear it in a conversation than because people are leaving!) I hope you were able to find what you were looking for in your next position. Thanks for being part of our team for more than 5 years (according to the bio line), and for your feedback.
2.0
Nov 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I loved working on the product and enjoyed serving the customers. The bulk of the product is, after all, the Bible and associated literary products (in electronic form). The other aspect of the company product is its proprietary software to access digital stories of electronic books. The software is fantastic and a great aid to research and study, especially of philosophical, humanities, and religious texts. I can’t praise the software enough. And the customers are people I enjoy and have a lot of compassion for: academics, community leaders, pastors, ministers, and students. As for the work culture, my coworkers and peers were largely awesome. I worked in the marketing department, so there were lots energetic, young people getting lots of marketing stuff done and there were always opportunities for great discussions. The free coffee and espresso was a huge boon, as well as the access to voluminous stores of always cold beverages (I had more than one liquid lunch consisting of a very large glass of free V8 juice!)

Cons

However, the free espresso, colas, and juices are a sop to the workers. Yes, it’s fantastic I don’t have to subsist on water, but what would really make the workplace shine is some sense that management actually cares about individual employees and is willing to help them grow. However (at least on the marketing side of the company), were were told “You should thrive on stress. Stress is an opportunity to rise to a challenge.” This is fine if the stress is merely about workload or a challenging problem. But when the stress is, “Is today the day I’m getting fired?” it’s simply not healthy. You are expected to sing your own PR—constantly—management will not notice, care, or promote you without extensive self-promotion—and there is little regard as to whether your self promotion is at anyone else’s expense. The marketing department has become extremely heavy: I’ve worked at firms that made 4x the annual revenue with literally 1/4 the marketing staff. The overall marketing strategy seems to be: Flog the whales who buy our product until they die. The old-school marketing blasts always generate revenue… from the same customers. Every. Single. Time. Growing their customer base will require a new kind of long-tail marketing approach that LBS is simply unable to embrace right now. For a company that markets religious product, it is a remarkably unreligious environment. On one hand, this is good: it means that there’s no bickering over theology or church practice. On the other hand, there was not a single meeting that ever opened or closed in prayer. There was never a sense that the actual Gospel enterprise was ever considered. The dollar is the top line, the bottom line, and everything in between. You would do well to memorize this mantra: What have you earned for me lately? If you work in the marketing side of the company and cannot tie your work directly to a significant dollar figure, you will be let go. There is very little or no transparency in the termination process. When I was let go, I was given no warning, no opportunity to change any behaviors that were not liked, and I was given no feedback during the exit interview as to what I might have done to offend management. This is also the case for coworkers I know who were also let go summarily. As an employee, I never felt management valued me, my contributions, or my input. Finally: You will need to cover your family’s healthcare insurance. Be prepared to deduct $500-$1K from your monthly salary to cover that.

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