Culture Clash - Designer Working Spaces Employee Review

2.0
6 Sept 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good reputation, certified women owned business. The owners started the company because they wanted to create something different than what was already out there. They are amazing women. They built it on respect and hard work for everyone. They have some fun events and a yearly toy drive that is legendary for the St Louis area.

Cons

Below the surface, not all locations share the same core values of the company. It is completely sales driven organization and the respect for the back part of the sales process is little to none. There's a lot of alcohol involved in the culture. Despite being a WBE company, they have a man as the COO and he controls everything. The benefits package is not very robust.

Explore other reviews about Working Spaces

5.0
13 Jan 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible, Great Culture, Nice showroom,Growing, Location

Cons

Not a great bonus structure

2.0
30 Aug 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working Spaces has a talented design team with creative, hardworking people who care about their clients. The firm provides exposure to high-profile projects and clients, and the design staff has a strong technical foundation. There are opportunities to learn industry-standard tools and processes, and the fast pace means you gain experience across a wide range of project types. The Denver office in particular has a collaborative peer culture at the designer level, and many colleagues were supportive of one another even in challenging circumstances.

Cons

At the leadership and HR level, communication and consistency are lacking. Promises of collaboration or support are often delayed or not followed through, leaving employees without clarity on role expectations or career progression. When displeased, leaderhip has a track record of intentionally implementing a disconnect between job titles and assigned responsibilities, which can result in highly experienced employees being "soft" downgraded. Conversations around workload, accommodations, or role adjustments are often deferred indefinitely, creating instability for employees. Leadership sometimes prioritizes business optics over supporting staff, which can make employees feel undervalued and replaceable.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All