Beamery Reviews

2.9

49% would recommend to a friend

(243 total reviews)

Has Dosanjh

66% approve of CEO

42% positive business outlook

Beamery has an employee rating of 2.9 out of 5 stars, based on 243 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Beamery employee rating is 25% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

243 reviews
1.0
30 Oct 2020

Avoid if you can

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You can always learn from every situation and come out stronger.

Cons

I have never left a company with so many people who deeply hate the place, it’s not one team which suggest the problems are deeper rooted. In my time there, I felt as though there was a culture of bullying from the top. Witnessing bullying from leadership – even seeing a founder break a colleague into tears over a minor transgression. It felt as though the firm was accepting of half truths – gaslighting was an art form at Beamery. In my experience, this company is focused on selling at any cost, there was a scorched earth marketing policy where no deal should ever be lost based on functionality. If that functionality didn’t exist – we’d claim we we’re working on an API to close the gap – but any MSA worded it incredibly carefully to provide protection to Beamery. The net result is carnage for everyone involved. Sales: You are only as good as who will speak to you. You may sell short term. But may struggle with your reputation in HR Tech long term. Engineering: Overpromised functionality means every sprint you will have shifting priorities on what is becoming a legacy codebase. But the expectation remained to deliver in all directions and satisfy the customer. Solution Delivery Consultant: You are given a client who is expecting the moon and have been promised endless functionality but will not have the functionality to make the client happy. But expected by leadership to deliver happy clients. Customer Success: Most likely a client will already be disappointed with the implementation so you are adopting a client who will complain and put stress on the relationship. But expected to prevent clients from churning. Employee churn: There are some comments on here disputing the levels of churn within the organization. I vividly remember a week where at least one employee resigned every day of the week, which for a company of 200 was huge. LinkedIn analytics will also demonstrate months where 30 people were hired, but there was no growth in total number of employees.

1.0
3 Jun 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

They hire smart and talent people and the product is forward thinking

Cons

All ex Beamery employees suffer with what is widely called the 'Beamery PDST'. This company has ruined some very confident and skilled employees and turned them into shadows of their former selves. Your hard work will not be recognized unless you are part of the inner clique or have the ear of one of the founders. Don't be fulled by the positive reviews on here. Some of the employees have been paid to write a positive review and told they will get a bigger bonus if they write a glowing review. My advice is call any ex Beamery employee in the team you want to join, and ask them why they left. It is so sad as the product is cool, does really cool things and they hire really talented people. But these talented people either stay, and you watch them change before your eyes into miserable colleagues who are overworked and burnt out or most people leave either with weeks, or after they are close to a mental break down and realize enough is enough. If you want to leave mentally worse off but for the chance to work on cool projects, ultimately that is your choice. It is so sad to see companies still operating with a dictatorship style leadership, especially when the product has so much to offer and does solve problems many TA team suffer with.

2.0
27 Jun 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Beamery has some very smart people, and you can work with some really interesting technologies. The pay and benefits are decent.

Cons

Beamery's founders maintain a very tight grip on how the company operates. The smallest decisions are frequently overridden by executives, leaving little room for more junior (i.e. below VP) staff to have a say in the decision making process. Feedback is often sought from employees, but this often feels like a token gesture rather than leadership genuinely seeking input. I've attended many meetings where people have presented detailed technical plans for a project, only to be interrupted by a cofounder who instructs them to do something entirely different with no justification. Operating like this means that employees don't feel trusted to make good decisions, with leadership treating them as little more than code monkeys. The company is also at the mercy of its customers due to its sales strategy. By promising to develop whatever feature a prospect wants, a huge amount of development work is created with every big sale, and engineering teams are constantly forced to derail their own plans to placate a new customer, often with very little notice or clarity of requirements. The company's efforts for diversity and equality are quite superficial. The board and cofounders are entirely male, and we scored very low on a recent diversity and equality survey. Transparency at the company remains poor. A review/promotion period was promised for November last year, after the August period was cancelled due to Covid. This November period didn't happen either, without even a single sentence of explanation from the People team or leadership. It was as if they were hoping their employees would all forget that it was promised at all. The company claims to be working on their transparency, but when they constantly get the basic stuff so wrong, it doesn't matter what else they do. Staff turnover is alarmingly high, at around 40%. That should really tell you all you need to know about Beamery.

avatar
Beamery Response
5y
Thank you for taking the time to write a thoughtful review. You’ve pointed out some teething issues that as a scaling company we are facing and working on improving. We’ve been transparent from day one that we may not get everything right from the start. You’re right in saying that we hire very smart people at Beamery. We trust people to do their jobs and we empower them to ‘own the change they seek’. I will be the first to admit, maybe I get more involved then I need to at times and that’s something I’m working on. Our DEI efforts are something that I am personally invested in. I do acknowledge we still have work to do, and I don’t think it’s something we’ll ever stop working on. We conducted a FairHQ DEI survey and shared the full results with our employees as ‘communicating openly’ is one of our values and key to building a diverse and equitable workplace. The survey surfaced some gaps we need to fix and we’re working on that. Our bonus review period was, and still is, Feb 1 and Aug 1. I do know that engineering had a separate review period in November 2020, and those did take place. This sounds like a possible communication issue between you and your manager which we’ll review. We also paid a universal bonus to everyone in August who qualified to receive their bonus. This was communicated to everyone while you were here. Everything we do here is about our people. Yes, sometimes people leave, this is natural. However, we are making sure that while people are here that they feel trusted, empowered and given the environment they need to do their best work. I appreciate your review and the advice you’ve given, I believe you make a lot of fair points. We’re listening, learning and growing everyday. Abakar, CEO and Co-Founder
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Glassdoor has 249 Beamery reviews submitted anonymously by Beamery employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Beamery is right for you.