* Leadership is a mess: The decisions made by leadership, especially at the top, are all over the place. There’s no clear direction or consistency, and it’s obvious they don’t communicate well with each other. Upper management makes big decisions without consulting the people who actually have to deal with them, leaving middle managers in the dark.
* Product integration is a disaster: The plan to bring the three platforms together was way too ambitious and it’s clearly not working. The platforms are still completely disconnected and there’s no real progress in sight. It’s obvious that management underestimated how complicated this would be, and it’s causing a lot of frustration for both employees and clients.
* The AI push is all talk: The company’s big AI push is really just a bunch of buzzwords. Their slogan, “AI without the hype: transforming data into action with Contentsquare AI,” is exactly what it sounds like—hype. There’s no real substance behind it, and it’s only a matter of time before someone else codes up with an AI first solution that leaves this outdated platform behind.
* The product is a nightmare: The product itself is hard to use, hard to learn, and hard to support. Clients are left hanging for months, without seeing any results. The company promises a lot but doesn’t deliver, and the lack of real support only makes things worse.
* Pay is a mystery: Pay is completely unclear. There’s no transparency around how compensation works, and it feels like decisions are made on a whim. It creates a lot of frustration and leads to a sense that some people are getting paid unfairly.
* Remote vs. in-office divide: There’s a noticeable divide between remote and in-office employees. Management seems to favor those who work in the office, and remote workers are often treated like second-class citizens. This causes tension and resentment within the company.
* Positive reviews are misleading: A lot of the positive reviews on here are from newer employees who are just happy to have a job. They don’t see the full picture yet and are blinded by the excitement of their new position. People who’ve been here longer can see how much things have gone downhill.
* The acquisitions are a mess: The acquisitions of Heap and Hotjar have been a disaster. Both of these companies had great cultures that were destroyed when Contentsquare took over. Instead of blending the best parts of those companies into something better, they’ve tried to force them into a generic corporate culture that clearly isn’t working. Many of the talented people have left, and the ones who’ve stayed are only here because the job market is tough—not because they believe in the company’s future.
* The company’s mission doesn’t add up: For a company that claims to want to “make the digital world more human,” it’s pretty unbelievable that they can’t even make working at Contentsquare more human. If they can’t fix their own internal problems, how can they possibly help their customers?