Pros
- Unlimited time off - Lots of free snacks and food lying around - Opportunities to change roles from mass turnover
Cons
- Company was acquired and there's no more stock. Bonuses used to be paid out every quarter - Toxic company culture and poor morale in the Santa Clara office with depressed people gossiping about who will leave next - Jobs being moved to Tacoma and Bangalore to cut costs - Brain drain and upper management has left. The quality of work has gotten worse compared to a couple of years ago - Extremely political atmosphere. Who you know matters more than what you know - Management continuously sets unrealistic deadlines on projects and burns out employees. No gratitude is shown except for free food. Guess what? Free food isn't culture - Broken promises and refusal by management to be transparent - Decisions made based on short term financial impact - Stay away from the cesspit that is the Santa Clara office. Tacoma might be better for now, but why on earth would you want to work for a company that has proven to be dishonest time and time again?
Pros
- Culture: they have lots of fun events, and also focus on giveback events which is really nice to see - Focus on growth: my manager seems open to giving me opportunities to learn and develop. - People: everyone is so nice and helpful, if you ever have any questions people are ready to answer or point you in the right direction - Hybrid: appreciate that my position is hybrid (2 days onsite) so gives me flexibility!
Cons
I haven't come across too many drawbacks, it is a global company so dealing with the time change when working through a problem can make the resolution longer.
Pros
- Depending on the team, you could work with amazing people - It's a fast growing company
Cons
- Heavily integrated with India and other parts of the world so the working hours are intense - They secretly had layoffs but refused to announce it. They say they are transparent but really, they just use it so everyone else is transparent - Engineering and Product Management lack clear direction and long-term vision. Priorities change constantly, often driven by the “flavor of the week,” which leaves teams scrambling and abandoning work before it’s finished or properly thought through. It creates an environment where no one knows what actually matters. - There is little to no effective project management. Everything is treated as urgent, regardless of scope or feasibility, with very little concern for doing things correctly or sustainably. This leads to rushed decisions, technical debt, and unnecessary stress for engineers. - Employees are severely overworked. Burnout is normalized. Many teammates feel pressured to work excessive hours out of fear for their job security, which creates a tense and unhealthy work culture. The on-call schedule is brutal and poorly managed. Issues are well known, but leadership shows little interest in fixing or improving the system, despite the ongoing toll it takes on employees. - People management is weak at best. Many managers are ineffective and treat their direct reports poorly, yet they are rewarded for being agreeable to upper management. Being a “yes person” seems to matter more than actually supporting or developing your team. - They try to convince you AI won't take over your job but constantly demands you to use AI for every aspect of your job...
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