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Culture Machine

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Culture Machine Reviews

3.2

55% would recommend to a friend

(79 total reviews)

48% positive business outlook

Culture Machine has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 79 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Culture Machine employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

79 reviews
1.0
31 Aug 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

After working here, you would learn to be very careful about your career choice.

Cons

This company is run by someone who plays a few CxO roles with non-existent technical- and people skills who would blame and backbite his employees for the multitude of failures caused by his own [in]actions. Employees who have pretty much done all the work and made the company what it is today are nastily backbitten at every chance without any regard, whether inside or whether they left already. No matter how good a team player/individual contributor you are, you will be immensely demotivated working here. The person supposed to provide technical directions does the following very well: > IS PERPETUALLY LATE for every meeting/appointment with the attitude that "you can(/have to) wait - you're after all being paid". > Would say, "Engineering is easy - try to raise funding and you will see how difficult it is;" > Would talk buzzwords (Big Data, Deep Learning, Neural Networks, Clojure etc.,) without having a clue about any of them. > Would go "off the grid"/"unreachable" on weekends, while writing harsh emails to employees who would be on pre-approved vacation once in a blue moon. > Would ask every employee what they think about a colleague he wouldn't like. He would then backbite that colleague without realizing that doing so would only ruin his own image. > Would take credit for all your hard work as due to him, and will brag about it as his own achievement. > Would backbite you for his own fault and label you as "not capable of leading", "has no clue what is happening in the company", "can't work as team" etc., when the people he would hire from IT services and the tech vendors would turn out to be the ones who cannot do the work without having to be told what to do every time. > Would shower appreciations on other employees for work done by you - or sometimes randomly praises someone who is in his good books without having a clue about who did all the work. > Would have you in his good books if you would not oppose to anything that he would say. If you want to join this company and work purely for money, just please silently listen to everything he would say. > Would hire top/crucial engineering roles based on his own non-existent "technical assessment skills", and when that turns out to be a blunder, would blame existing individual contributors as "not capable of working as a team". > Would show knee-jerk reactions like asking the finance department to stop payments if you legitimately have no access to emails on an approved vacation taken once in eternity. > Would conduct futile ER-modelling discussions involving non-technical product managers to show off his [non-existent] technical prowess to non-technical folks. > Would continue to backbite an employee long after they left the organization. Engineers here are seen as use-and-throw commodity. At this company you will be treated like nothing more than a tissue paper, and flushed down the drain. You work for a boss, or you work for a leader. Here at engineering you work for a boss.

avatar
Culture Machine Response
9y
Hi, Let me start by saying that “One lie has the power to tarnish a thousand truths.” But given the volume of unfair accusation that I found in this thread I thought it was necessary to provide my point of view here. I'll let the reader to draw their own conclusions based on their own judgement. Everyone is "entitled to their own opinion but not to their own facts". The facts about this person from the management view are: - The person constantly mis-used the flexibility given to work remotely by not showing up for team meets or company events. When questioned replied back that it is a waste of his time - Never worked as a team player - as an example - never was ready to mentor or help any new comers and chose to hide his work. When the new Eng head questioned this attitude he became someone who is technically non-proficient. - Always put his self-interest before company's by not adapting to engineering standards. Had his own code base and repository and refused to do knowledge transfer - During a planned critical customer demo (despite knowing the importance) went on a holiday without providing even the access tokens to the new engineer who was transitioning to the project from this individual and was supposed to do the demo. Did not return phone calls or emails for days and only when management decided to hold off the salary, responded and gave the necessary access for the team member to complete the preparation for the customer demo. -Always exhibited an air of intellectual arrogance and condescending about folks joining from other organization terming them to be from IT service background. It is an irony because this individual himself comes from a similar IT service industry background and was given an opportunity to work on a product building role for the first time at CultureMachine. I am not saying I have not made mistakes as an individual and not open to feedback. As an example I have apologized to many in my team for being late for meets, which in my defense has always been when I am traveling across a lot in different timezones and joining remotely from hotels. The level of vitriolic detail that has been shared in this thread shows the extent to which someone would stoop low to back bite their former manager, team and company. One fine lesson I have learned from this thread is to cut "Bad Apples" lose sooner than wait for a long time and given them additional opportunities to change, because not only they don't change, spoil the culture but are also ungrateful human beings.
1.0
23 Aug 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You won't find a single PROS even after working for 10 years for this company.

Cons

Every single thing about this company is CONS. Let me describe some so that it can't spoil someone's career. 1. People working in upper management are like trained donkey. They don't even know the product well. They just conduct meetings take follow up, that's it. 2. To survive in culture machine you don't need to have knowledge of any technology/tool/skill. You should just know how to do proper buttering of senior persons. 3. It's the degree college of demotivation, for every brave step you will be demotivated from upper persons. No one talks about the new technology/innovation. 4. Some people of this company are from big ORGS, what they did was they find referral from somewhere, prepared for interview, buttered higher person and got selected into their tribe. Now what are they doing is, just destroying the careers of dynamic professionals. If I would need to write the review for this company I can write it for whole day. But I don't think this company is even worth of my precious time. My last and very true suggestion is, if you are getting chance to work for BPO/KPO/GroceryShop then please go there instead of working here. Here, they will ruin your life/career/learning everything.

1.0
6 Oct 2016

Vulture Machine!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The office and the parties are supercool. It is an extension of college.

Cons

Management is extremely myopic. My boss - the Audience lead - never ever supported me. I was asked to make money on office trips in an unbelievably unscrupulous manner. There was no support whatsoever! He would always engage in gossip with female team members

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Culture Machine Response
9y
Unfortunate to hear that. We have taken note.
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Glassdoor has 88 Culture Machine reviews submitted anonymously by Culture Machine employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Culture Machine is right for you.