Amateur Hour Series B - Sales Executive Snappr Employee Review

2.0
17 Aug 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

*lean and mean org structure means exposure to C-leadership and oppty to make impact *has somehow survived in a business where many competitors have failed *occasional fun outings and off sites *there remains a possibility the company could succeed despite itself

Cons

*CEO is a rare combination of very smart and intellectually lazy - makes for a tedious arrogance and constant mistakes for not listening to expertise. A deeply frustrating person who cannot let go of micromanaging things inthey have little experience *company culture is exceptionally negative and frequently combative *sycophants are rewarded over expertise and skills *pay is low, benefits are barebones , PTO is minimal, there is a forced office attendance with zero benefit to company or staff *there is no HR staff, there’s no finance person, the entire administration is run by the founder and his minion junior staff. - it’s completely bizarre for a series B *terrible customer relations and account management have made growth beyond initial Covid era upswing nearly impossible

Explore other reviews about Snappr

5.0
5 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Opportunities to improve editing skills and speed while still maintaining consistency across projects. Wide variety of editing work that doesn’t sacrifice creativity. Exploring different styles instead of repetitive editing assignments every day. Managers expecting accountability while still giving editors room to handle projects independently.

Cons

The volume of work can be overwhelming sometimes.

1.0
20 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good learning opportunities and some personal development opportunities.

Cons

This is not a good place if you actually care about your work or your projects. Leadership says all the right things in meetings, then immediately makes decisions that leave people confused, exhausted, and constantly questioning what changed overnight. If strong performers can be pushed aside so easily, it makes it hard to trust anything about job security or fairness. The CEO is visible when it comes to speeches and appearances, but when employees need clarity, support, or real direction, everything goes silent. The entire environment became extremely stressful because no one ever felt secure, and most people were just trying to avoid being next in line. Some contracts and policy decisions appeared outright unethical, and several conversations involved people comparing notes just to confirm what was really happening.

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