Data Paradigm Reviews

3.0

43% would recommend to a friend

(26 total reviews)

Paul Booth

100% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

Data Paradigm has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 26 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Data Paradigm employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

26 reviews
1.0
13 Jun 2012

A small company with big problems.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Right next to a Dart station - easily reachable. Company pays for parking/dart pass. Good location downtown, lots of places to eat. Health insurance and 401K provided.

Cons

General feeling of distrust from management. Every employee starts off on a 3 month probationary period after which they tell you if you can stay or leave. Rather than hire the best people based on interviews they hire anyone who walks through the door and then weed out who they perceive to be subpar. An unintended consequence of this is that people with good communication skills but poor technical expertise stay on, not contributing much to the company. High turnover due to unease with management. At a time when companies are trying to be as flat as possible DPI is going the opposite direction - trying to add as many managers and supervisors as they can. This completely takes away the advantages of joining a smaller company career wise. Good ideas can be harder to communicate with upper management by being drowned out by people in the middle. Very old culture - both in terms of age as well as technical ideas. Most developers there use antiquated technologies - like classic ASP. Some employees think BASIC is faster than C++. No documentation for anything - management thinks it's a waste of time. That combined with the fact that there's more red tape than within the CIA - even the simplest tasks can take days to accomplish. Salaries are very skewed and not consistent. Age seems to be compensated more than technical expertise.

avatar
Data Paradigm Response
9y
I couldn't agree more. Your comments are well thought out, honest and very much needed. I am new (returning) to DPI to lead the company in a more positive direction. Thank you for your feedback.
2.0
13 Jul 2017

In a word: antiquated

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Most previous benefits (close to DART, sodas in the fridge, etc) are now irrelevant since quite a number of workers are now telecommuting from what I hear thanks to recent employees. So on the surface there's at least the work from home benefit. Health and dental benefits are fine if you are a single person who enjoys working for working sake. Sometimes with the right team you can be lumped with creative minds who encourage you, assuming you are that lucky.

Cons

Nearly everything in the company is in a word: antiquated. The pay scale is sub par, best described for folks working back in the '90s. The coding itself was Classic ASP last I remembered, current talks with people still suggest nothing has changed. Methodology isn't waterfall or agile or even existent. It it more like "do this thing in the next five minutes, because we should have made is 30 minutes ago." All the while such childish antics spurred by the clientele was forgiven by the CEO, Paul Booth, because "they exist in a emotionally charged environment and we have to remember that". Because of this, clients are the main priority and nothing else matters. Good managers leave for other prospects or have to pretty much work 24/7 in order to stay afloat with the company. Developers have been referred to as "resources" to their face and are treated as such. While Managers had a weekly meeting to ensure they stay on track, developers were never allowed such structure. Coding standards simply do not exist. You are expected to police your own code. There is no oversight by senior developers, because they are overworked. Anyone with a modicum of talent is overextended to the point where they can't perform their originally intended responsibilities. If you try to take a vacation, paid or otherwise, and you are the only person capable of what you do then that vacation is now a working vacation. Yes even on your time off there have been multiple instances where you have to put company first. Your family, life, and anything outside of that is seen as mere distraction. Resentment towards higher management was so constant it was seen as the true corporate culture within some circles, all while the company tried to instill "fun" with a Culture Committee: A selected group of people trying to distract you from the fact this company is working antiquated technology with antiquated pay scale, and a antiquated way of thinking from the main boss because he doesn't understand new ways of developing.

1.0
15 Sept 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I seriously cannot think of ANY good reason to work here. Maybe Halloween. As long as Carlette still works there.

Cons

Unless you live in downtown Dallas, the commute is horrible. The benefits are underwhelming. There was NO room for advancement as a developer. No training offered to increase a developer's expertise. All that was wanted was "Make it do this with vbscr1pt. Clunky, slow, outdated technology. Senior management were as bad as the pyramid scheme clients they serviced, thinking that working till you drop with no outside life has some value.

avatar
Data Paradigm Response
9y
Thank you for the feedback. We've recently made some internal changes to include management at the top level. I appreciate your open and honest comments.
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Glassdoor has 29 Data Paradigm reviews submitted anonymously by Data Paradigm employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Data Paradigm is right for you.