employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

CreditCards.com

Part of Red Ventures

Is this your company?

Used to be a good place. Not any more. - Anonymous employee CreditCards.com Employee Review

2.0
22 May 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

This USED TO be a great place to work at. Smart people, Management was approachable, new ideas were encouraged, everybody got along really well. I looked forward to going to work every morning.

Cons

Another reviewer pointed this out. Over the last couple of years, there have been some changes to the senior leadership team. In Technology, only "friends" of the leadership were given benefits and roamed free. Others were let go, unfairly accused of poor performance. The new product team only hired from the leadership's close network. See interview reviews - this does reflect the problem. Plenty of favoritism going around, leading to a poor culture and work environment.

Explore other reviews about CreditCards.com

5.0
9 Jun 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Small team working on significant projects - Great management - flexible working hours

Cons

- customers could be difficult - priorities can shift quickly

1.0
12 Sept 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It's a long-established, profitable company which has been purchased by a much larger, established, profitable company. If you are a young professional or fresh out of college who fits in with Red Ventures culture, you will do well.

Cons

The new parent company tends to be insular, very bossy, highly centralized, and ignores dissenting expertise that come from outside HQ. Company culture borders on tribal, even cultish, which has made for a difficult transition since the buyout. Leadership tends to be domineering and top-down while being all smiles and professing to be free of hierarchy. Because the parent company is based in the Carolinas, they have difficulty grasping the cost of salaries and real estate in Austin. This has negatively affected staffing levels and compensation. The Austin office will lose its bonus plan and transition its benefits to the parent company’s in January 2019. Everyone with knowledge of the business or industry in Austin has been fired or quit. Almost no senior-level talent remains. Thanks to layoffs and attrition since November 2017, the Austin office is now approximately 45 people, down from 120. Any feedback provided by the Austin office to the parent company tends to result in combative, defensive responses from HQ.

4
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All