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Poll Everywhere

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Poll Everywhere Reviews

3.4

58% would recommend to a friend

(42 total reviews)
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Robert Graham

30% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

Poll Everywhere has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 42 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Poll Everywhere employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

42 reviews
1.0
15 Apr 2021

In need of a huge morale boost

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-401k match -useful and entertaining L&Ls -DE&I rep is a breath of fresh air -internet / phone reimbursement -fun pre-COVID retreats

Cons

-Performative attempts to be a progressive company. Yes, they have donated software and services to organizations involved in racial injustice, but there is no accountability for how often people dismiss or talk over PoC. -Transphobia exists. In my firsthand experience, in the fall of 2020, there was a public town hall where an anomyous employee displayed transphobia when a positive trans message was shared. It was not dealt with immediately (until perhaps a week later), fostering a dangerous environment and was initially ignored by the leadership and People Ops. Also, we are still waiting for the recognition of a respectful AAPI statement rather than an afterthought. -Unqualified people involved in the interview hiring process for different roles and asking inappropriate questions. -Job descriptions are openly vague and left to interpretation. -Lack of structured training. Missing materials. As previous people have said, it is a sinking or swimming situation. -Culture feels unnatural and forced. Those who have been here for a long time have a beehive mentality, which feels unpleasant. When you are interviewed for a role, People Ops will play up your role and describe how "amazing" the culture is. If you're not a fit, you'll know right away. If you raise doubts, you will be treated as if you have put yourself in the situation. -People Ops has no idea when it comes to recruiting for the roles themselves and do not understand the basic functions of the roles. When you express concerns and describe the reality of the role, you will encounter doubts. -No work-life balance, brutal burnout rates in customer service departments. There is always a sense of urgency and various teams are constantly overloaded, overwhelmed and undervalued. For those who are in the product, there is no real sense of direction or progress. There’s no real way to contribute valuable work since there’s already a vision which is confusing and ever-changing. -Veteran employees come across as privileged and basically just earn a check in exchange for no real value in the company. In a company that advertises itself as welcoming and friendly, there have been countless times when people reach out to coworkers through Slack just to receive blunt and borderline rude responses -- or worse, no response. When you try to report a problem, you will be flooded with several people in the company asking you to describe the problem in detail and repeat it. -During one of the retreats, there were several employees who privately broke down due to their difficulties working there. When we got back to the office, it was as if no one had revealed anything. Morale needs huge improvements.

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Poll Everywhere Response
5y
We put a lot of effort into these issues and clearly missed the mark, I’m sorry that this is what you’re experiencing. We’ll be going back to the drawing board, recommitting to listening more closely and seeking to understand, especially as we gear up our work with our external DEI consultant in the coming weeks. We hope that if you have additional feedback, you will also use our feedback channels so we can engage some of your thoughts live (anonymously during our all-hands meeting). This holds us more accountable because we will speak candidly in front of the entire company and can trust the feedback is from a current employee and gauge how widely it’s felt. Other folks will be able to ask questions as well. - Ops Team & Jeff
2.0
7 May 2024

Well-meaning, but possibly moribund

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Everyone you work with is, generally speaking, a "good person". They seem to select pretty heavily during hiring for people who pass the vibe check, so by and large all of your coworkers are pleasant and agreeable people. Much talking is done about DEI and employee development, though its consultant sourcing makes it come off as oddly corporate for a company this small. Great pay and benefits, plenty of perks like free coffee delivery, Fridays off in summer, twice-yearly company retreats, but...

Cons

... it clearly wasn't sustainable. When a company can go from "we're growing to a hundred employees" to "20% of the company is fired" in the span of less than a year, something is severely wrong and it isn't the fault of any of the people who lost their jobs. The product is behind competitors, and leadership is stuck playing catch-up on features of unclear value, scope or demand. New-hire team management often comes across as confused or performative, which then reflects poorly on the results of those they manage. Employee attrition has centralized a lot of institutional knowledge onto people who don't deserve that much pressure and don't have enough hours in the day to work on everything. This has now surely been exacerbated after layoffs.

1.0
31 Mar 2021

The Sunken Place

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Internet and phone reimbursement Annual bonus In person retreats (pre COVID) and virtual

Cons

Executive leadership is very comfortable in their own privilege (all white cisgender men). People Ops is ineffective and requires all complaints to be proven with data until they are addressed and found to be valid. Once you have presented your case they will tell you that they do not believe you, this is commonly known as gaslighting. The CEO is like a helicopter parent with a serious case of White Saviour Complex. In a company of about 60 people, there are 2 black people, none of whom are in leadership. If you're not enjoying yourself here, People Ops will attribute it to your personal choice not to participate in the culture. People Ops intentionally misleads when recruiting in terms of culture. They know we have a big problem but are loathe to try and fix it. DEI work is performative and leadership/People Ops are uninterested in trying to actually do the work required. Massive amounts of emotional labor are placed on minority groups. Transphobia blatantly ignored by leadership. High turnover (a disproportionate number of POC have started to flee in the time I've been here). We have an attrition problem. We have dropped by at least 15 people in the past year. A steep decline in work-life balance in the near 2 years I’ve been here, especially on client-centric teams. These people are undervalued and suffer from year-round burnout. Onboarding is loosely structured and makes it difficult for new people to learn a very complicated product. Communication between many (not all) teams is either aggressive or extremely vague. Leadership thrives on ambiguity rather than conveying concrete and actionable messages. Leadership is very concerned with Glassdoor reviews and will do their best to determine who the person providing the negative comments is. Pay is not competitive and the justification is that it's because this is such a wonderful place to work. To those who are considering joining - look elsewhere. To those who are still there - get out.

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Poll Everywhere Response
5y
Our exec leadership and People Ops teams wrote this together. Here at PE, we try to live the authenticity we talk about both in our hiring process as well as in the day-to-day work. We first want to acknowledge that your perspective is a valid one and is respected. We do see and hear so many other, more positive perspectives from our current and past employees, but we recognize that this perspective is yours to own. Anyone reading this is invited to ask anyone who works here (or used to), “Hey - what was that early 2021 glassdoor about?” I trust anyone you reach out to will speak their truth and do their best to decode this experience that’s got moments of truth, moments of something less, and a lot of valid hurt. One way I trust your experience was so painful is that the review is written in a way that takes many of our aspirations, our open vulnerabilities, and the things we’re proud of, and tries to exploit or deny them one by one. That hurts. We feel it. We’re sorry about where we failed and for the trauma you experienced. As a candidate, you should ask anyone here what we do to confront our privilege as an exec team that’s currently all cis white men. The leadership hasn’t looked this way for most of the company’s history and we commit to it being temporary. In 2020, Poll Everywhere committed to DE&I training, donated software and services to organizations who advanced racial justice, and compensated members who participated in our DE&I committee. To our knowledge, we’re proud to have put more funding and effort into these causes than other companies our size. We’ve made a serious commitment. There’s no denying we have a long way to go. This year was hard as hell. We got through COVID with no layoffs. One team fell apart, bad. Some of that was leadership’s fault. We’ll never expose people’s private situations, and we try not to refute people’s lived experiences. This is hard work for everybody, and we know by trying to build a more diverse team we're opening ourselves up to critiques, but we think it's worth it, even reading a critique as difficult as this, to continue going down this long road and make progress. Respectfully, Jeff
Viewing 1 - 3 of 42 Reviews

Glassdoor has 42 Poll Everywhere reviews submitted anonymously by Poll Everywhere employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Poll Everywhere is right for you.