Pay and benefits before 2024
Leadership Development Needed: The engineering leadership would benefit from management training. The company currently assesses employee engagement and happiness based on the number of emojis received in posts and evaluates engineers solely using metrics like lines of code written and completed tickets. However, these metrics are considered inaccurate, immature, and ineffective.
Shifting Expectations: Employees often find it challenging to understand the criteria for evaluation. When changes occur, they are not adequately communicated. Unfortunately, surprise documents labeling individuals as failures without actionable feedback are common.
Fear-Based Environment: The prevailing atmosphere is one of stress and self-preservation. Blame and finger-pointing are rampant. Management frequently emphasizes the company’s competition-related challenges to instill fear.
Feedback Disregarded: Feedback provided to management appears to vanish into thin air. Conversely, feedback received from management tends to be unhelpful.
Mixed Performance: Staff engineers exhibit varying levels of effectiveness. Some inadvertently create more problems than they solve for their teams.
Ambiguous Engineering Principles: While “Move faster” is a guiding principle, the direction remains unclear. Projects have arbitrary deadlines but lack well-defined requirements. Leadership could set an example by improving the company culture.
Transparency Gap: Although transparency is touted as a core value, it is not consistently practiced. Silent layoffs have occurred, and laid-off employees have been discouraged from submitting negative reviews. A targeted list of individuals seems to be under scrutiny, hindering their chances of success.
Talent Drain: Capable engineers and leaders are leaving in significant numbers. Two out of the three founders are less involved, and the remaining founder lacks a clear vision for running the company effectively.
Please do the company a favor and find meaningful replacements for leadership roles.
Stop using fear as a motivator.
Extremely unprofessional. I had a 20-minute recruiter screening for a Software Engineer L3 role, where the recruiter emphasized that I would 100% hear back regardless of whether or not I move forward in the process. I never heard back, even after se
Good experience, standard recruiter screen, not many curveballs. I didn't make it past the first round, but the application and initial screen experience was good. The recruiter was good at her job, super knowledgeable about the team and role, and he
A recruiter reached out via email and made a good pitch for the position. Had a call with another recruiter who took over the process, then a job fit interview with the hiring manager call, a take-home coding assignment which took a few days, follow
Extremely unprofessional. I had a 20-minute recruiter screening for a Software Engineer L3 role, where the recruiter emphasized that I would 100% hear back regardless of whether or not I move forward in the process. I never heard back, even after se
Good experience, standard recruiter screen, not many curveballs. I didn't make it past the first round, but the application and initial screen experience was good. The recruiter was good at her job, super knowledgeable about the team and role, and he
A recruiter reached out via email and made a good pitch for the position. Had a call with another recruiter who took over the process, then a job fit interview with the hiring manager call, a take-home coding assignment which took a few days, follow