Commure Reviews

3.5

59% would recommend to a friend

(329 total reviews)
avatar

Tanay Tandon

70% approve of CEO

62% positive business outlook

Commure has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 329 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there.

Reviews by job title

329 reviews
1.0
30 Jan 2025

When Vision Meets Delusion

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Hard to find any, but if you’re considering this company, it only makes sense if: 1) You’re in desperate need of a visa extension or immediate financial relief (even then, there are far better options). 2) You want to build your own startup one day and want a front-row seat to observe everything NOT to do when building one. If you’re neither of the above and care about your work or its impact, save yourself the trouble and run. Don’t walk—run.

Cons

Working here feels like participating in a morally questionable venture. Leadership starts with lofty, inspirational speeches about “transforming healthcare,” but soon you realize the company’s actual philosophy: ship incomplete, dysfunctional products and mislead customers who don’t know better. This multi-product company lives by the toxic mantra of “speed above all else,” ensuring that nothing we build is even minimally viable. Products are rushed out the door on absurd timelines without research, testing, or QA—often resulting in costly mistakes for customers. One example: A core product we offer routinely fails at handling even basic functionality, creating chaos for the customers who rely on it daily. Many openly warn us that our products have disrupted their everyday operations, making their lives more difficult instead of easier. It’s a recurring theme across all our products, and even interns without prior experience recognize this isn’t how a business should operate. Instead of addressing these systemic issues, leadership blames employees and forces them into overtime to clean up the mess. The reward? Hollow shoutouts and meaningless promotions—just bait to overwork you further to fix their mistakes. You might think, “Startups are messy. Mistakes happen, and that’s how we learn!” Sure—but not here. This company doesn’t learn. Leadership has been lucky so far, exploiting a niche market where some customers remain patient. But luck doesn’t last forever. The CEO and CTO are too arrogant to take feedback or acknowledge failure. Instead, they focus on signing new deals and paying off gullible customers to give glowing testimonials for broken products. To make matters worse, they surround themselves with “yes men” who lack both experience and vision. Some key hires are walking proof — no product sense, all politics, and pure intimidation. Delivering value? Fixing systemic issues? Building a culture? Not even on their radar. The company’s motto, “The day doesn’t end until the customer is happy,” is a bold-faced lie. Very few customers are happy—employees even less so. The operations team—hired as guardians to protect leadership from infuriated clients—is overworked, underpaid, and treated like slaves. At its core, this company acts like a reckless teenager, drunk on ambition—idolizing tech giants like Apple and Google while refusing to learn from their processes. You might argue, “Startups are all about ambition and taking a leap of faith.” Fair enough. But here’s the problem: Ambition is valuable when paired with introspection. When combined with arrogance and ignorance, it’s a recipe for disaster.

1.0
4 Apr 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Absolutely none. In fact, the only good day you’ll have at this company is the day you walk out for the last time.

Cons

The entire company is in a free fall, desperately scrambling to backfill the mass exodus of employees who have either quit out of frustration or been pushed out due to incompetence at the top. They’re throwing bodies at the problem rather than fixing the root cause, and it shows. This place is completely driven by ops and out-of-touch executives who couldn’t even articulate what the company does if their lives depended on it. Decision-making is erratic, priorities shift weekly (if not daily), and leadership is more concerned with optics than actually solving problems. If you’re joining as a product manager or engineer, save yourself the pain—this is not a tech-driven company. The head of product is single-handedly responsible for half the product, eng, and design team quitting. They have no idea how to run a product team, no vision, no leadership skills, and no understanding of basic product management. Instead of actually leading, they create a toxic culture of fear, bullying engineers into delivering unrealistic deadlines while pushing out half-baked, broken features. This is not surprising, given that most of the so-called "leaders" are underqualified interns who were conveniently placed in high-ranking positions because they happen to be friends with the CEO or CTO. The tech is held together with duct tape, and when things inevitably break, leadership just gaslights employees and customers into believing it’s all fine. This company spends more time on PR stunts and media appearances than actually fixing its internal problems. If you value your career, your sanity, and your self-respect, do yourself a favor and stay far, far away.

1.0
6 Jun 2025

I quit after only 4 days here

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote, but honestly, there are no pros to this

Cons

This is not a product company whatsoever. You have business analysts literally coding up the infrasturcture for commure with no code/low code, and have no engineering background at all. If you are an engineer, avoid this company at all costs. Extremely toxic management style with inexperienced managers who have zero technical background whatsoever. My skin was turning yellow from the domain disconnect and felt like I was going to have a heart attack or brain aneurysm, very unhealthy here.

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Glassdoor has 348 Commure reviews submitted anonymously by Commure employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Commure is right for you.