Oddball Reviews

4.5

88% would recommend to a friend

(71 total reviews)

88% positive business outlook

Oddball has an employee rating of 4.5 out of 5 stars, based on 71 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there.

Reviews by job title

71 reviews
2.0
17 Jun 2024

A Warning

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

For much of my time with Oddball I would have had an exhaustive list of pros in categories ranging from culture and people to work/life balance and how engaging I found the work. Today the only redeeming feature I can find with this company is that they will ask only that you come to work, get some amount of work done, and turn a blind eye to any concerning behavior or work from higher-level employees.

Cons

I was a long-time employee of Oddball having started when there were around 40 employees. I can genuinely say that for several years I really enjoyed working at Oddball. The culture and people were fantastic, the work was engaging, there was good flexibility to meet the needs of my family, etc. My love for the company ran so deep I was willing to do anything they asked. I even ended my parental leave for my newborn early in order to come back and help because the company needed me. Unfortunately, over the last year I witnessed a dramatic shift in the culture at Oddball and the way they treat their biggest asset, their people. They seemed to openly ignore requests for growth and additional leadership opportunities, and they flouted opportunities to consider hiring from within for key roles (this extended far beyond me to others who had been with the company even longer than I had). Instead, they turned to “flashy” hires, folks who were former Silicon Valley employees and IT executives. It did not matter that some of these individuals had zero experience with federal contracts, nor did they care that some of these individuals didn’t have the technical knowledge to do the job. I believe one relatively recent hire was using ChatGTP to generate much of their work. Some of these new hires were outwardly hostile to others who dared to ask questions or suggest alternatives regardless of the legitimacy of those questions or suggestions. Given my time at the company and my long history with the espoused culture of the company I felt it was my duty to speak up about how this was impacting the team and ultimately the work product. I felt driven to do this by my ongoing belief in what Oddball represented as an employer and company. After much discussion and investigation (which included several coworkers who told me they expressed the same or similar concerns) I and my coworkers were essentially told to sit down, shut up, do our jobs, and follow orders. I have a young family to support so that is what I did. Then one day I came to work and logged into a regular supervision with my boss to be met by the COO and Director of HR who informed me that my services were no longer needed within the company as there was a lack of work. I attempted to negotiate a demotion to a lower-level role or some amount of severance but was told my employment would end effective that day. Within a day they had taken someone else from within the company and filled my former role. Within a week they posted a job for hire that I could easily have demoted into (as I offered to do). I was not given any sympathy for the financial blow this dealt to my family, nor did anyone care enough to provide me with any insight into how I went from an employee in good standing (no PIP or other adverse action to put me on notice) to unemployment in a matter of seconds. I cannot adequately express how devastating this was to me. I had invested my heart and soul into this company because I truly believed they were different from other companies and valued people and humanity. I sacrificed time with my newborn baby and spouse because my dedication ran so deep. It is clear to me that the Oddball so many people describe in older reviews on this page no longer exists. They do not value people. Each employee is just a number in terms of how much money they can make the company under federal contracts.

2.0
21 Jun 2019

Confused, stable and remote

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Oddball is a remote first company. Management really wants to try to make it pleasant. They have a great culture and yearly sync ups. Everyone is very happy and welcomes new employees. Stable stable stable. A job that is guaranteed to last through the next few years and be mostly immune to economic problems. You are primarily working on government contracts using the latest techniques of 2012. If you need to get just basic experience before moving on this is the place. Pay is about average for the work not too spectacular. Your work isn't closely monitored everyday. Some perks such as business and education stipend. Mostly unlimited vacation. Easy to take time off for emergencies or just vacation. Surprisingly good benefits and retirement options. The company is growing rapidly and has many open positions. Passionate about helping people and working for the government.

Cons

With government clients comes the lack of inertia for moving forward. There are times when it takes several weeks to just get to a point where you can get a denial for a change and have to start over. The engineers you're working with range from skilled to not skilled and in between. Patchwork between multiple vendors working on a single service makes it difficult to get things done. Being a government contract less than skilled engineers tend to last much longer and get promoted. The less you know the more likely you are to be a senior engineer. You are not going to be working on anything very sexy or new in this position. Pay is average, no opportunity to get raises or promotions as this is all government contract and set in advance. No moving up or laterally between projects. Pigeon holed to where you first start. Hard to get answers to spending questions from Oddball finance group. Will usually take several emails to finally get attention for simplest questions. Too many meetings. Just too many meetings. Quarterly reviews will ping you for something you did months before and no one mentioned it at the time. Then keep mentioning it again and again in later reviews. The one little nothing is still getting brought up many months later. You have to provide you're own work equipment. You have some opportunity to pay for it via the spending account.

1.0
16 Aug 2022

Smoking Mirrors...this place is a Zoo

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If working from home is a pro, there ya go

Cons

My mental health, work-life balance, and professional confidence suffered greatly during my employment here. This company is mainly concerned with two things: image and bottom line. The bottom line (the profit) is the most important, and if you get in the way of it, you won't last very long. Even if it is on behalf of many individual contributors/teams in hopes of improving internal operations to promote long-term scalability. • Unrealistic expectations with workloads and communication. — Workload: The team members are constantly inundated with more projects than they can reasonably handle with timelines they can’t realistically achieve, and a lot of time is wasted with daily re-prioritization to meet the unreasonable demand. — Communication: Non Existent. This management team is all about gas lighting you, its a sickness. The lack of information between departments (the “sink or swim” culture that causes constant cross-functional misalignment), leadership and individual contributors will often come up with different answers for “the why”, leading to frequent communication breakdowns. ICs are responsible for making important decisions with 50% of the information they need to do so, but are 100% responsible when the breakdowns occur. • Lack of accountability for leadership There is a general unwillingness for accountability measures or anything more than minor changes to workflows to hold both members of leadership and departmental leads accountable for unrealistic timelines/expectations or missed deadlines/deliverables. There is no safe or comfortable avenue for discussing challenges with other departmental leads or leadership TO leadership, and no clear picture of WHO exactly is supposed to be holding those leaders accountable when they aren’t following processes, delivering their project pieces, or communicating effectively. • Disorganization In short: is rampant. Teams are constantly shuffled and restructured, people given new titles, individual contributors switched from one lead or department to another because the creative teams are not growing at the same rate as the demand. These “restructures” attempt to redistribute the unreasonable volume of work without hiring more people, resulting in a LOT of stress and uncertainty. But the solution of "more people" is rarely considered. • Cliquey There are certain people who have the CEO’s ear, and have far too much sway over decisions about things they are not actively involved in on a daily basis. The mid tier group of management here is so overworked and stressed its evident this is a sinking ship. This extends to who stays and who goes. Leadership does not apply equal weight between your peers’/direct reports’ experiences working with you and the clique’s opinion. I’d go as far as to say they don’t consider the former at all. Other reviews have mentioned the startling way terminations occur. I agree. I've seen so many excellent resources quit, some have even quit with no notice and I do not blame them with this toxic environment. Little to no information is given to the rest of the team when it happens, and it creates a lot of fear and uncertainty for individual contributors. Great people with years of experience and phenomenal work ethic were let go, seemingly on a whim or a bad day. • HR I cannot say I fully understood what the HR department did while I was there. Sometimes they were involved in HR-related conversations, sometimes they weren’t. It made for a relatively uncomfortable and uncertain experience, as I mentioned above, in regards to a lack of safe avenues to discuss workplace issues.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 71 Reviews

Glassdoor has 72 Oddball reviews submitted anonymously by Oddball employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Oddball is right for you.