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Better Collective

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Better Collective reviews

3.1

48% would recommend to a friend

(144 total reviews)

Jesper Søgaard

41% approve of CEO

17% positive business outlook

Better Collective has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 144 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Better Collective employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Mídia e comunicação industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

144 reviews
1.0
Mar 5, 2025

This place constantly lays people off very unstable stay far far away

Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Honestly there are no pros because this place has no rhymn or reason. Just take a look at the other TRUE reviews.

Cons

If you are going to leave your job for better collective DO NOT. They are saying they are a sports media company but they are a company that acquires other sports related businesses primarily in the gambling affiliate sector and make money from affiliate revenue. They do not produce anything of value, they have a few podcasts that get sponsored by their affiliates that has followers other than that they're just constantly looking for new places to acquire to keep revenue and traffic up. Since they produce nothing of value any mismanagement immediately results in layoffs. Job security in all jobs is a myth but at better collective you start the clock as soon as you get hired. Management makes mistakes they automatically go for layoffs. Affiliate revenue declines they go for layoffs. Since their main revenue stream comes from signups to gambling and betting offers which is a very volatile sector any decrease they see they go for layoffs to keep shareholders happy. I wouldn't invest a penny into this company because it's paper mache. Do not work here if you value your career.

1.0
Feb 28, 2025
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

The companies they acquire are filled with talented people, yet those same people usually get let go the year after an acquisition because BC doesn't know how to organize and integrate the companies they acquire and they resort to layoffs instead of trying to build a cohesive business.

Cons

The executive leadership appears out of touch and incompetent. BC is structured so their executives are based in geographic locations (South America, North America, etc) and oversee the companies they own in those regions. However, the leadership seems to have little knowledge of the businesses they run and how to operate them. They appear to lack a fundamental understanding of the sports gambling space in the U.S. and how it differs from Europe, failing to adapt and adjust to obvious trends in the industry (sportsbooks spending less on marketing and affiliate partnerships, legalization in major states stalling, etc.). The executives then blame these struggles as the reason for layoffs and suggest that they are exploring new revenue streams, but then those never come to fruition. In 2023, there were layoffs that were deemed as a result of failing to meet affiliate revenue projections. Instead of investing in other revenue streams (monetizing content, selling media partnerships and sponsorships, selling ad space on podcasts/video shows, brands' websites and apps, etc) they acquired two more companies, then laid off 300+ more people a year later in 2024. When they acquire companies, they do not integrate them so you end up with company leadership that is often at odds because the brands (Action Network, Playmaker HQ, The Nation Network, RotoGrinders, Vegas Insider, etc) are in the same sector, but have no incentive to collaborate. Then every year, senior leadership at these companies are forced to re-sign with their positions going unfilled, full teams are let go and these individual companies are left understaffed and under-resourced. These companies then are left without key components (Vegas Insider had an understaffed content team, The Action Network never had a dedicated sales team, Playmaker HQ didn’t have a dedicated studio space, etc.) They also seem to skirt the line between legal compliance and ethics with many things and their decision-making when conducting performance reviews and layoffs does not appear merit-based with executives seeming to protect those they are friends with while laying off those who are actually meeting or exceeding performance standards. Overall, Better Collective is neither an effective collective or better than other brands in the space. And it’s much worse than you can imagine.

Viewing 34 - 36 of 144 Reviews

Glassdoor has 175 Better Collective reviews submitted anonymously by Better Collective employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Better Collective is right for you.