Great Colleagues, Troubling Cultural Shift - Software Developer Flightradar24 Employee Review

2.0
13 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

For most of my time here, this was a genuinely great place to work. The product is used by millions, and that created real pride in the work. The people were the best part: talented, kind, and collaborative. I made real friends here, all of whom I deeply respect. For years, the culture felt healthy, trusting, and focused on doing good work. I was part of a team made up mostly of remote workers that consistently delivered high-quality results, showing that remote collaboration was not a limitation when trust and clarity were present.

Cons

Recently, the company has changed in noticeable ways. There has been a clear but indirect shift away from supporting remote workers, communicated subtly rather than openly, creating uncertainty instead of transparency. Given the proven performance of fully remote teams, this shift feels less about results and more like a convenient explanation for perceived delivery challenges, combined with a growing preference for tighter control. HR communication has become increasingly impersonal, with important messages delivered via AI-generated podcasts, which feels inappropriate for serious matters. New managers hired in the last period show little openness to feedback. Concerns and risks raised by experienced team members are dismissed, and decisions are pushed through without real discussion. The lowest point was the sudden layoff of several long-term contractors, some with over 10 years at the company. Layoffs were handled via a 15-minute call, with no real explanation and no visible sign of empathy. Access to accounts was revoked immediately, signaling a complete lack of trust. The company stated this was not related to performance or location, yet new job postings for the same roles appeared the following day, explicitly Stockholm-based.

Explore other reviews about Flightradar24

2.0
8 Feb 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The office is in a great central location. The workplace is very international, with people from many different backgrounds and nationalities. Colleagues who are not part of upper management are genuinely kind and friendly to work with. The product is well-known, popular, and genuinely cool.

Cons

A clear lack of trust from upper management toward employees. Many achievements and contributions go unrecognized, leaving employees feeling undervalued. The very little recognition feels forced and fake. Speaking up to share concerns can be seen as threatening instead of constructive, which makes people scared to open up. It feels like employees are treated more as replaceable resources than as human beings. This has become even more noticeable since the recent shift in focus toward shareholder priorities. Employees can be let go without consideration for their experience or expertise, as seen recently when 12 veteran consultants were laid off on the same day, many of whom were not just colleagues but also friends. Chaotic and stressful reorganization pushed by shareholders and upper management that feels more like we're reorganizing for the sake of saying we're reorganizing, rather than responding to a real need.

7
2.0
31 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- There are many talented and kind employees in the company. - Used to be a great place to work - Working hours are reasonable - International team atmosphere. - The product is very strong and successful.

Cons

- The CTO sometimes look more focused on LinkedIn career than doing real technical work. This is often left to external contractors. - The owners and CEO do not seem to care much about the people working for them. - HR processes are unprofessional, confusing and inconsistent. - Important company communication is often done as Slack posts written with ChatGPT. This gives impression that management do not want to speak to employees as people. - There is not much autonomy even for middle managers, with a lot of micromanagement. - In the last year there is history of upper management bullying out strong performers by demotion or hiring replacements behind their back. - Several good people left in the last 12 months because of these problems. - The lack of autonomy can be stressful and some employees experienced burnout. - There are strange rules like not being allowed to openly criticise or give feedback on decisions. It can feel like a culture of fear if people speak out. - Team social events like dinners are sometimes obligatory, and employees sometimes have to pay themselves.

6
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