Pearson Assistente Editorial reviews

3.8

98% would recommend to a friend

(25 total reviews)
avatar

Omar Abbosh

2% approve of CEO

98% positive business outlook

Assistente Editorial employees have rated Pearson with 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 25 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Assistente Editorial professionals have a good working experience there. Pearson is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Assistente Editorial professionals compared to other employers within the Audiovisual y medios de comunicación industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

25 reviews
3.0
Aug 7, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent job security Direct Managers were understanding that the workload was impossible

Cons

Almost no training have to go through a million people in order to get a task completed tons of red tape basically felt like a cog in a machine very little support no opportunity to grow within the company Expected to do thw rok of four proplr when co-workers left and no one was ever hired to replace any of them

2.0
May 20, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Opportunities for a career...if you are interested in sales or don't care about significant salary advancement. - Generally lax and low stress work environment, depending on your position and department. Mine has not been. - Great benefits.

Cons

- The salary is pathetic - it is not competitive at all and it is not negotiable. This is frustrating, especially given the amount of responsibility that you can end up with (for example, my department started with 3 assistants. Two of them left but were never replaced so now I'm doing the work of all 3 but am actually making less than what I was making when I started due to the 2013 tax increases). - No real job description - when I interviewed for and received the position, there was a clear job description outlining the position and what is expected of you. However, soon after starting, that was totally thrown out the window. I have actually been told be a superior that "your job is to do whatever I tell you to do". Usually not irregular or even something worth complaining about but given the low salary, lack of opportunities for advancement and the absence of overtime, it can become extremely frustrating and make you feel like a glorified intern. - State of the company does not bode well for career opportunities - when I first started here, everyone made it seem like this was a career job, one that would lead to great opportunities within the company and ensure that I would be with Pearson for a very long time. But things have changed. The amount of open and available positions have decreased significantly and the CEO started talking layoffs at the latest state of the company meeting. Unless I decide to become a sales rep and move to the middle of nowhere, I'm practically stuck. Either that or I can hope for a semi-lateral move to another department that would increase my salary by a whole 2k a year. All the while, the higher ups are having meetings at the Bellagio in Las Vegas, or having corporate retreats in Bermuda. Not to mention those two assistant positions they never filled (why hire two new people when you can sucker one assistant to do the job of 3 for the price one 1?). Something doesn't add up.

Viewing 16 - 18 of 25 Reviews

Glassdoor has 9,537 Pearson reviews submitted anonymously by Pearson employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Pearson is right for you.