R.R. Donnelley Legal Proofreader reviews

2.0

Be the first to recommend this company

(3 total reviews)

Thomas J. Quinlan, III

Not enough data to show CEO approval

82% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

3 reviews
2.0
Jul 30, 2023

It’s a job…

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Independent work - Coworkers are kind

Cons

- Pay is laughable, especially for proofreaders. $17 an hour for college-educated professionals while people with less education in document processing make upwards of $25. - WFH options are abysmal and slowly being phased out entirely. You will have to bake in the heat all summer to commute. - If you are joining Project Cardinal, be ready for an excessively high turnover rate. You may be asked to train newcomers, which will require planning for which there are no guidelines. Workflow coordinators sack proofreaders with extremely tight deadlines and have no logical or practical knowledge about how long it takes to read and edit. - Additionally, Project Cardinal is excessively fussy about confidentiality to the point that you will not be allowed to bring a cellphone even close to the office you will work 8 hours a day in. No music. No podcasts. No using the computers for those things either, as it is “too much bandwidth.” - Management for the legal accounts here is… divisive, to say the least - Absolutely no warning for the disturbing content you will read. Most of the time it is boring, sometimes it is harrowing. - You will NOT be allowed to take your PTO, much less take a leave, on the dates and times you request due to “coverage.” Management forces employees to barter with coworkers and attempt to convince someone else to cover shifts like we work in a restaurant. This usually involves asking someone who is already overworked and miserable to commit to working a degree of overtime in order to make sure the 24/7 operation doesn’t reveal any gaps in coverage (wouldn’t want the law firm to know about the skeleton crew and irreconcilable turnover), so the answer is usually No, and that is the extent of effort put toward accommodating your request.

1.0
Feb 23, 2021

Don't Work Here

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

In exchange for your mental and physical health, you could well receive financial stability here for a year or two.

Cons

My first 90 days of employment here consisted of a probationary period for which I was expected to not call out sick and during which my health suffered permanent damage. Once committed to the work here, managers and supervisors have unrestricted license to grind you down for criticisms that I suspect vary for everyone, but that many who are employed here appear to receive with demoralizing frequency. I suspect that so-called feedback is dispensed unevenly, with those who curry more favor in the office -- or who are more effective at the work -- being able to do as they please to others while those who struggle or are less favored face heavier heat for broad criticisms unrelated to the work.

2.0
Sep 29, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Small teams and strong team work; great holiday pay; many opportunities for overtime; variety in the workload, so every day is different, but still more or less predictable.

Cons

Low pay compared to industry standards, poor benefits, high workload, and high expectations; very high turnover rate; no upward mobility; few to no raises, and what raises are offered are negligible at best. If you talk to management, they brush off any concerns or suggestions.

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