Vantaggi
Prosek is filled with highly intelligent, well-connected people, and the opportunity to learn from them is one of the firm’s greatest strengths. The agency has built a strong reputation within financial services, and having Prosek on your resume carries real weight within the industry.
The firm works with an impressive roster of high-profile clients, which provides exposure and experience that are difficult to find elsewhere. The pace is demanding, but the professional growth and skill development are significant. Regardless of tenure, most employees leave far more equipped for future opportunities than when they arrived.
CEO / Leadership has also done a great job positioning and growing the firm within a highly competitive space in a relatively short amount of time.
Svantaggi
The prestige and client roster come with an intense work environment. Expectations are extremely high, and burnout among junior- to mid-level employees is inevitable. The culture can feel overly competitive and heavily micromanaged, with even simple, routine deliverables often requiring multiple rounds of approvals. At times, “feedback” feels more driven by personal preference and the egos of senior level employees rather than strategic necessity, which slows workflows and undermines the confidence of junior staff.
There is also a blatantly obvious insider culture. Employees who did not rise up from the apprenticeship program internally or who come from different professional or socioeconomic backgrounds may find it difficult to fully integrate or gain trust from senior leadership. Many senior employees have spent most or all of their careers at Prosek, which can create a narrow view of what healthy agency culture and workload expectations should look like.
The firm is acutely aware of the affluent backgrounds of much of its workforce, and that reality often seems reflected in underwhelming benefits, limited performance incentives, and a notably frugal approach to expenses. Health insurance offerings are weak, bonuses and manager discretionary budgets are limited, and travel policies can feel excessively restrictive — including instances where employees were encouraged to stay with friends rather than being provided hotel accommodations for work travel.
HR is deeply involved in employees’ day-to-day experiences, often in a way that feels more supervisory than supportive. Rather than prioritizing employee engagement or culture-building initiatives, HR maintains a close watch over individual performance and workflows. Compared to many peer agencies, there is little investment in employee resource groups or meaningful internal programming focused on employee experience.
Agency work is notoriously busy and chaotic, but Prosek encourages this further rather than trying to manage it effectively. Responsiveness expectations are constant, workloads are often unrealistic, and employees can feel pressure to remain available beyond what is reasonable for pay.