Raise Reviews

4.2

75% would recommend to a friend

(90 total reviews)

Tim Masson

98% approve of CEO

87% positive business outlook

Raise has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 90 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Raise employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Human resources and staffing industry (3.8 stars).

Reviews by job title

90 reviews
2.0
26 Oct 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The vacation time off was nice.

Cons

I have so many cons about working here so let me put this in bullet points to make it easier to read: - They claim they are a teal organization which means its self-managed but its complete BS. You need to ask for everything on your own including your pay raise which can only be done every 3 years and its an advice process which means anyone in the company can give you "advise" on why you should or shouldnt ask for something. And by advise I mean, they will tear your self confidence and worth apart to make sure you dont get what you are asking for. - the people who have been working at the company for the longest are gossip kings and queens, Everything you do or say to another co worker will for sure to go the ears of the older heads. Its wild how much the people who work here love to gossip. They are all also either related or best friends. - There is no such thing as self- managed. Ask much as they say you dont have managers, you defiantly do and they micro manage you like crazy but when it comes to asking for a raise, they are the same people who will disagree with how much you are asking and ripe you apart. - Anyone can fire you. They have a system in place which comes with the teal organization called contribution review. If anyone in the company thinks you aren't doing your job or simply does not like because of some conflict, they can initiate a contribution review and get your fired from the company. It is one of the most embarrassing things to have to go through. You have to do a write up and explain how you do your work and what you have done in the past few months and again anyone in the company can join the advise process and rip your self worth apart and disagree with you. Its is so humiliating and I will never understand why people have the pleasure of doing that to one another - Lastly, the higher you are in the company the more you can pay yourself and but the lower you are the company the more under paid you are and that is why they are going bankrupt. People who are related to the CEO make $170k and higher paid job like recruiters are outsourced in India and ghana and they fired 20% of their Canadian workforce just to outsource more in India and ghana. They are certified B-Corp but outsourcing doesnt seem fall under B-Corp

2.0
5 Mar 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The organization demonstrates a forward-thinking and experimental approach underpinned by a robust culture that encourages autonomy and a focus on service. These principles are inherently positive and are designed to maximize individual potential.

Cons

While the leadership team frequently highlights their dedication to a "self-management" framework, purportedly eliminating traditional hierarchies, the reality within the organization often contradicts this narrative. The environment is rife with individuals primarily focused on climbing the corporate ladder and engaging in office politics, skillfully masking their true intentions with terminology borrowed from the self-management lexicon, mainly inspired by the book "Reinventing Organizations." Unfortunately, operational dynamics diverge significantly from the proclaimed values, undermining trust and creating a disconnect between stated principles and daily experiences.

2.0
9 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong sense of purpose and mission, especially within delivery teams that remain deeply committed to client outcomes and organizational success. Teal principles encourage ownership, accountability, and self-driven execution across roles. Recruiters and delivery professionals consistently demonstrate resilience, adaptability, and a strong focus on protecting contribution margins. Leadership communication is often transparent at a strategic level, helping create initial alignment and trust.

Cons

From the perspective of a recruiter within a Philippines-based delivery environment, recent spend priorities have been difficult to reconcile with the financial trade-offs expected from delivery teams. While recruiters were asked to absorb salary impact, navigate contract-to-permanent transitions, and operate with reduced incentives in support of company sustainability, approvals for high-cost in-person offsites created a visible disconnect. These involved stakeholders not directly tied to day-to-day coaching or delivery enablement, and much of the intended collaboration could likely have been achieved through virtual formats without materially reducing value. This has contributed to a morale gap, particularly as profit-linked outcomes such as PTD, compensation adjustments, and profit sharing remain uncertain for those carrying frontline delivery accountability and protecting margins. There are also growing concerns around role leveling and pay equity. Instances where individuals with comparatively limited delivery exposure are elevated into leadership roles with higher pay bands, without clear communication on criteria, create perceptions of inconsistency. Over time, this risks diluting confidence in merit-based progression and leadership decision-making. There are noticeable credibility gaps emerging in leadership expectations. For example, VM now strongly mandates that recruiters take on US roles, despite previously expressing reluctance to work on those same roles due to their complexity and performance risk. This shift has been acknowledged in discussions, where it was shared that US hiring was earlier avoided out of concern about difficulty and job security. However, the current approach leans heavily on directive enforcement rather than coaching, enablement, or shared accountability. The message being received by delivery teams is that expectations have changed without corresponding support structures or acknowledgement of the challenge involved. This creates a perception of “do as instructed” leadership rather than values-led leadership. In a Teal environment that emphasizes ownership, empathy, and self-management, such inconsistencies can feel misaligned with the principles being promoted. Over time, this risks eroding trust and makes the philosophy appear situational rather than embedded in day-to-day leadership behavior. There is also growing concern around the value realization from certain senior offshore leadership role, SD. Despite being positioned within higher compensation bands, there appears to be limited hands-on recruiting depth and minimal direct contribution to sourcing or delivery problem-solving when teams require immediate support. In instances where operational assistance was requested to unblock active hiring needs, the engagement remained largely advisory and did not translate into tangible recruiting output. This creates a perception gap between compensation levels and on-ground impact, particularly for delivery teams operating under cost pressures and performance expectations. When leadership roles are perceived as removed from execution, yet continue to sit in premium pay brackets, it reinforces the belief that investment is skewed toward hierarchy rather than delivery effectiveness. Over time, this risks disengagement among recruiters who are closest to client outcomes and margin protection. More broadly, this feeds into a narrative that organizational values—particularly around ownership, contribution, and stewardship of resources—are not being applied consistently across levels. Strengthening accountability for measurable leadership impact and ensuring capability-role alignment would help close this gap and reinforce trust. There is a growing perception within delivery teams that certain leadership decisions are having a disproportionately negative impact on morale, delivery effectiveness, and trust in internal programs such as RaiseOne. When initiatives are associated with high investment but limited visible value for recruiters on the ground, frustration builds and confidence in those programs declines. Rather than strengthening engagement, these gaps risk creating skepticism about leadership intent and the practical relevance of such initiatives for frontline teams. Re-centering these efforts around delivery realities, measurable outcomes, and recruiter enablement would significantly improve adoption and credibility.

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