Most of the workforce is talented, smart, and friendly. I've made some great friends in the years I've worked at Credit Karma.
I've generally gotten the impression that C-suite leadership cares about its employees. When other companies would be laying off their staff, C-suite would temporarily freeze hiring and reduce some non-essential benefits to keep everyone on board. I preferred this sense of community.
Depending on the team, you could have a ton of autonomy and trust. You'll likely have core tasks you need to accomplish, but there's plenty of opportunity to improve things.
Competitive compensation and great benefits.
Legitimately cares about Diversity and Inclusion with an internal D&I team that is responsible for keeping the company accountable by metrics and reports on them company-wide.
Supports a healthy work/life balance, but depending on who you are, it's easy to put in more.
Offices have an open bar. Generally, I've been impressed with how Credit Karma employees can have a good time while also not getting out of hand. Fun bunch to hang with.
There's a ton more to say, and if Glassdoor allows me to edit this, I'll try to update this review as I reflect more. But generally, I highly recommend giving Credit Karma a try if the high-level looks okay to you. I've heard of many horror stories of other large tech companies and FAANG, and it always made me relieved to work at Credit Karma. The years I worked there were the best in my career so far, and if they were open to remote work, I'd probably still be working for them. Much love to my fellow Karmanauts!
Historically, leadership was against any remote work. For multiple years, the subject of remote or hybrid work would come up every year, and leadership wouldn't budge until the pandemic. Recently, there's been a push to return to the office with a hybrid model where employees are in-office a few days a week. From what I know, the reception seems mixed, but leadership is steadfast in bringing employees back to the office.
Some engineering teams, especially engineering infrastructure teams, are very slow to move for one reason or another. Oftentimes, they seem understaffed but can also be unfriendly, unhelpful, and unwelcoming of outside contributions. Similarly, some internal tooling is dated and slow to improve or under-resourced and left to the product teams to maintain.
Now that Credit Karma is owned by Intuit, a lot of changes to the company have happened and will continue to happen. Credit Karma products are integrating with other Intuit products, especially TurboTax. This is exciting from a scale standpoint, but might prioritize fewer exciting Credit Karma product big bets, and the company overall has a more "corporate" feeling.
It lost some of its "funky charm" as it's grown.
Depending on what team you're on and who your manager is, you could have more challenge than others to get opportunities for career growth and promotions. In some cases, there are a lot of senior-level and above employees that bring questionable value for their level. Some high-potential or high-value employees are undervalued.
No more free meals and fewer, less frequent team outings (as of 2022).
Unless you're senior-level or above, flexibility in long-term time-off, such as for a sabbatical, is unlikely to be approved. This excludes maternity and baby-bonding leave.
12 hours you'll never get back. I will start with everyone is nice. I will add that unless my experience was vastly different, I still don't know what the position was for after meeting 10 people. Pay was $160k (maybe, as they beat around the bush wi
Overall, a mediocre process. The recruiter assigned to me was not the best communicator and did not properly communicate the format nor provide sufficient preparation strategies for the onsite interviews.
I had a complete negative experience talking to both the recruiter and the coding interviewer. Firstly, the recruiter was talking too much and ran away without giving me a chance to ask her questions. She did not respond to my questions either. Als
12 hours you'll never get back. I will start with everyone is nice. I will add that unless my experience was vastly different, I still don't know what the position was for after meeting 10 people. Pay was $160k (maybe, as they beat around the bush wi
Overall, a mediocre process. The recruiter assigned to me was not the best communicator and did not properly communicate the format nor provide sufficient preparation strategies for the onsite interviews.
I had a complete negative experience talking to both the recruiter and the coding interviewer. Firstly, the recruiter was talking too much and ran away without giving me a chance to ask her questions. She did not respond to my questions either. Als