iNET Web reviews

3.4

63% would recommend to a friend

(84 total reviews)
avatar

Steven Libbey

64% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

iNET Web has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 84 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The iNET Web employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media & Communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

84 reviews
1.0
Aug 4, 2015

Eh

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I liked the people I worked with.

Cons

I wasn't allowed to talk to anyone when working, ever. Had to listen to people get yelled at all day.

1.0
Jul 31, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This was a great place to work only for the following reasons: 1. I learned a lot! My education did not prepare me - technically speaking - to actually create websites and some of the other designers really helped me out. I left this job feeling confident in my abilities. 2. I met some awesome co-workers here. A few have turned out to be really great friends. The techs were cool, and most, not all, of the web department was cool, the office supplies person was cool too. 3. I quickly found out what poor management looks like. 4. Since this was the bottom of my professional career, the only way forward was up!

Cons

Oh man, where to start... Management was the worst I've have ever seen or experienced, ever (I've literally known fast food managers better). The CEO Steve Libby, is an egotistical hot head. "Oppressive psychological warfare and intimidation" is how I would describe his "management" style. He's a big juice head who knows he can intimidate you physically. He doesn't care about anything other than "getting it done", I realize businesses are about making money, but not at the total expense of your employees. I've heard him scream at, cuss out, ridicule, belittle, and humiliate other employees. (I really feel sorry for his kids and wife!) There was NEVER positive reinforcement, it was always negative. Always. You could not do anything great it seemed, only adequate. He wanted 8 billable hours out of us every day in the web department. A realistic 4-5 billable hours is the norm at actual web development firms. We actually had to explain to him that we had to use the bathroom or eat lunch when he saw a gap in our billable time. Both Steve and Kurt have ZERO creative instinct. ZERO. I can't stress this enough. They both wouldn't know good or poor design if it smacked them in the face. The big irony of iNet is the fact that Steve thinks he is a master of marketing, only to him, good marketing is making fun of, and relentlessly bad mouthing your competitors (that's not marketing). No creativity at all. I didn't realize it at the time, but when I started interviewing for other jobs having iNet on my resume was actually a detriment, it turns out iNet is the laughing stock of professional web development. Micromanagement was rampant! I remember a few times when a project would come to us, we'd design it, get approval from the customer, move forward and start cutting it up only to have Steve have us change the design around to better showcase iNet. The customers would not be too happy about this because they'd have a design that they liked (and often conveyed exactly what they wanted to us), but Steve would literally say, "the customer doesn't know what they want" and have us redesign the whole thing... I don't think Kurt had any idea what was going on the whole time I worked there, and he was a huge brown noser to Steve. That was the only way to climb the ladder there; major brown nosing or being related. I realize this sounds super exaggerated, but it true! I worked there for about a year, and even though I got fired, it was definitely for the best. The sales staff: I don't have too much to say here, but these guys definitely were Steve's favorites, and it showed. The benefits: lousy at best. No direct deposit, they released our checks to us on Saturdays, not Fridays, so you'd have to make a special trip on your day off to get paid. No retirement options, mediocre insurance (that was before Obamacare, so it's probably horrible now if they even still offer it) In summery, beware prospect employees or customers. Stay clear of iNet! You'll be better taken care of elsewhere. Don't listen to the poor marketing, if you want to have a voice in the creation and implementation of YOUR website, go to a real firm. Don't support this business!

5.0
Jul 31, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I've been able to foster and polish my technical Internet-based skills, from creating new websites to improving existing ones. While some workdays are long and grueling, (just like any other job I've have) iNET creates a friendly, family-like atmosphere. Additionally, pay is very competitive and the possibilities of advancement are almost endless. Job accountability is as follow (in order): (1) Accountability to your clients then (2) accountability to iNET. iNET is a very ethical company; I've left jobs in the past due to unethical behavior. Ethical companies are very hard to find, so kudos to iNET for that.

Cons

Small workstations make for a cramped work-space, but I think it's being addressed. Large workload takes a little while to get used to.

Viewing 61 - 63 of 84 Reviews

Glassdoor has 93 iNET Web reviews submitted anonymously by iNET Web employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if iNET Web is right for you.