DebtBook Reviews

3.2

48% would recommend to a friend

(41 total reviews)

56% positive business outlook

DebtBook has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 41 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The DebtBook employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

41 reviews
1.0
20 Feb 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you're lucky you'll have a salary of 85k or higher, but it's not worth the money I can assure you.

Cons

I had an awful experience working at DebtBook. The leadership team, including the CEO, COO, and CFO, had no prior corporate experience and made unilateral decisions that left directors and managers feeling unnecessary. They mismanaged finances so severely that they over-hired, leading to a layoff in early 2024, followed by additional reductions in late 2024 and early 2025. These cuts created widespread fear and uncertainty, prompting dozens of employees to quit on their own. The company operates like a "good old boys club"—if you're not in the right circles, your hard work will go unnoticed. They changed the compensation plan three times in one year, making it clear their goal was to minimize payouts rather than fairly reward employees. Pricing for customers was raised arbitrarily, only to be reversed the following quarter, showing a lack of strategic direction. Poor leadership was a constant issue. The company overpaid executives while hiring first-time, inexperienced managers who micromanaged employees and set unrealistic expectations. For example, the Customer Success team was expected to achieve 130% Net Revenue Retention, 95% Unit Retention, and $2M in upsell/cross-sell—despite not even owning the renewal process, which was handled by Sales. This left CSMs powerless yet blamed for any account issues. The so-called "unlimited PTO" policy was misleading—taking more than a week off was frowned upon. The work environment was outright toxic, with manipulative people and a leadership team that refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing. In January 2025, the entire HR department quit on the same day due to the liabilities the company was exposing itself to. If you’re considering a job here, my advice is simple: stay away. The reality of working at DebtBook is nothing like what they tell you in interviews, and you will 100% regret it.

1.0
28 Apr 2024

Run, Don't Walk

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I really enjoyed working with my fellow engineers, they are smart and lovely people. It would be great to work with them again one day.

Cons

Half of my immediate team (including my former manager) was put on PIPs (Performance Improvement Plans). As well as many engineers from other sibling teams (at least 3 that I know of), to the point where I have lost count there were so many. These are really smart engineers, ranging from greener mid-level engineers who graduated from their computer science bachelor's a couple of years ago to very experienced staff engineers with graduate degrees in computer science (and decades of experience at both large companies and small startups). Then almost all of my former team was laid off. I have never experienced such a mess of a Performance Review cycle, where not only were so many engineers put on PIPs, many other engineers were given harsh feedback and surprise bad/not-great reviews (at least an additional 2 that I know of). Many engineers already work long hours, including on the weekends. I am convinced that Management rained PIPs on engineers to push them to quit to avoid paying for severance. In the codebase, there is a lot of untested code...that is then super buggy. This goes back to just seeing engineers as code robots to churn out as much code as possible. Engineering Management praises engineers who work long hours. And then, for what? It never felt like there was a clear goal from Upper Management, but just to churn out tons of product offerings. It was also very difficult to work with my Product Director, where I felt like I had to bend-over-backwards to get a crumb of collaboration from them. It was challenging to get basic requirements for new features that Product wanted built. It was normal for surprise requirements to be thrown in last minute. And for more context: engineers cannot merge new-feature code without Product Approval. Engineers are also highly scrutinized how many merge requests are merged every week and every month. This leads to a losing game as an engineer. It was difficult to get my features even looked at by Product, where once I waited over a week to get something reviewed. I tried to ask another Product Manager to see if they had more bandwidth to look at my feature and they were forbidden to do so by the same Product Director (I have no idea why). That same Product Manager soon quit with no notice... I wish I were joking, but working here felt like a toxic episode of Silicon Valley. How is it that such a high number of engineers were put on PIPs? It can't be such that so many engineers were hired that can't code build software, right? Why was it such a struggle to work with Product?

1.0
16 Apr 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The salary was competitive. Company has a lot of opportunity to capitalize within its market.

Cons

Company prefers to quietly get rid of employees by managing them out or driving them to quit. Remote team was treated like second-class colleagues. Company brought everyone into town for a lavish kickoff event, only to perform layoffs later in the quarter.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 41 Reviews

Glassdoor has 41 DebtBook reviews submitted anonymously by DebtBook employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if DebtBook is right for you.