Pretend Paradise - Product Pebl Employee Review

1.0
19 May 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Remote work. -Freedom to work internationally or within other states. -Work/life balance is decent.

Cons

-Executive leadership can come across as combative and indifferent towards team. -Several benefits stripped from employees, including education stipend. This discourages in-house education and deters knowledge-seekers from wanting to stay. -Advancement opportunities only given to managers that talk even if what they're saying amounts to nothing. Doers are ignored with no credit due. -Company is purely reactionary instead of proactive, causing rift between teams, customer, and mission. -"Too little Too late' hiring practices has caused bottleneck in getting talent where it is needed. -Poor support when it comes to ERGs or any diversity efforts. "make it work" mentality is off-putting to those that are already pushed to their limits by their day-to-day. -High turnover due to in-team fighting and unrealistic expectations. Especially true between Product and Ops org. Other orgs have to act as the peace-keeper and get burned. -Lack of organization, standardization, and managerial accountability.

Explore other reviews about Pebl

5.0
9 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people were great! The benefits were also really good.

Cons

Lots of upper management changes. Went through multiple CROs in a year.

1.0
1 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Teams are incredibly dedicated, collaborative, and always willing to support one another through challenging transitions. - Strong focus on actively listening to and advocating for customers' needs at the team level.

Cons

- Executive leadership frequently dismisses employee concerns during all-hands calls and relies on empty promises to manage morale. - The company has gone through multiple rounds of layoffs with zero internal communication or accountability. Employees often only discover colleagues have been let go when they suddenly disappear from communication channels. - Following major organizational shifts, leadership failed to re-align priorities. This created an environment devoid of unified goals, leading to silos and internal division. - Despite the chaotic environment, the frontline employees work incredibly hard but receive little to no recognition or support from upper management.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All