Angi Software Developer reviews

3.7

57% would recommend to a friend

(63 total reviews)
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Jeff Kip

12% approve of CEO

10% positive business outlook

Software Developer employees have rated Angi with 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 63 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Software Developer professionals have a good working experience there. Angi is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Software Developer professionals compared to other employers within the Information Technology industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

63 reviews
3.0
Jun 24, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Without a doubt, everyone I worked with day to day was great. There is a "we're in this together" attitude, which I’d say is rare. This is exemplified by many engineers and managers, including myself, choosing to leave Angi after a recent round of layoffs heavily impacted our teams. You will be challenged by your work and expected to write code that is testable and bug free (Angi has no QA team for many of its product teams, not a pro). You will also be expected to do tasks outside of your title which I enjoyed for learning and growth (example: a font end engineer may need to act more full stack occasionally). Work life balance is pretty good. Stepping away for a doctor's appointment or other personal events is usually not a problem. I was never pressured to work late nights, but you'll definitely have enough on your plate to work late if you want. "Unlimited" PTO is definitely a perk and if your manager is good like mine was you'll have no problem taking off. Although, I never felt comfortable taking a full work week off at once. Meeting schedules are very reasonable. Usually just one 30 minute to an hour long meeting at the beginning of the day to talk with your team about what you've been working on.

Cons

HomeAdvisor was a great company until its merge with Angie's List and rebrand into Angi. The leadership was great and you could tell they knew how to run a public company. HomeAdvisor was growing and revenue was up. Things were being done right. Once the rebrand to Angi occurred the company had most of its C-Suite execs replaced with people from start up backgrounds. Thats when the layoffs began. Shortly after the rebrand, product directors and managers who played a key role in making sure the rebrand was successful were fired in a first round of layoffs. Believe it or not the home services business model is actually fairly complex and a lot of business specific knowledge is gained the longer you work here. That knowledge cannot be easily replaced. However, the new C-Suite believes that the business model can be simplified. Therefore, this knowledge is disposable. This would be true, but when you have built your entire tech stack around the first business model it is very unwise to layoff the people who are most knowledgable about it. But, that is what happened. The second round of layoffs came when our new CTO asked for a list. From this list, the new CTO chose dozens of engineers to be laid off without consulting their managers. This layoff came right after our quarterly reviews where my colleagues who were fired passed with flying colors. It was a huge shock to us all. On top of this, those of us who got to keep our jobs were notified about who was being laid off before the individuals being laid off were. Therefore, when we reached out to our fired colleagues to tell them how sorry we were they had no idea what we were talking about. Then in our next company wide meeting we were told that the layoffs occurred because of a “new company direction” and that most of my laid off colleagues’ positions would be rehired for. Finally, when our new CTO was asked when the next round of layoffs would be he laughed. I would expect this kind of behavior from a start up struggling to raise series A funding, but not a public company. I’ll work for HomeAdvisor, not Angi.

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Angi Response
5y
Over the past three years, some of the biggest players in our industry (HomeAdvisor, Angie’s List and Handy) came together to form what is now Angi. We are sorry to hear that you felt this changed the organization for the worse. Over these past three years, we have embarked on a big journey to redefine how people care for their homes and support over 200,000 small businesses. We are proud of the progress we have made and changes are necessary to take on our big mission. We are also sorry to hear that you felt that recent organization changes were not handled well. Change is never easy, but we take your feedback seriously. We appreciate you leaving us this review and sharing your experience with us. We hope you can see we have taken employee feedback seriously and have made strides to rebuild a culture Angi people are proud of - Laura Kato, SVP, HR
3.0
Jun 16, 2021

It's okay

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Get to work with a lot of smart people.

Cons

A lot of changes in recent years including structural changes, which caused a lot of talented people to leave.

2.0
Jun 7, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Unlimited PTO - Work life balance used to be great before the new CEO came

Cons

- Randomly laying off talented employees (I am still working but so many of my talented colleagues were let go with a two minutes long explanation). Even the Dev managers did not know that their group members were laid off by the higher up. First set of lay offs went on Product people and without explanation and the second set of lay offs went on developers and no prior notice. - Poor severance. One week salary for the every six months of work. People who got laid off before two years, lost the employer contribution of 401k. - When the Higher ups were asked why this big lay offs, they said it was due to the path those devs were taking. All on a sudden all the devs were required a full-stack knowledge to succeed in the company. But their managers were giving them thumbs up on their path on the Role Success Docs. So, not only people who got laid off but also their managers had zero idea about the lay offs. - Random deadlines without any specific product direction which leads to burnout on employees. - cliche but worth mentioning that the salary is below market standard. - You are required to have full-stack knowledge of Backend even if you are an iOS dev and hired for specific role.

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Angi Response
4y
We are sorry to hear your discontent about recent changes made within the technical arm of our business. While change can be hard at first, we are excited about the new leaders we have added to our team and the knowledge and experience they bring to help us on our mission to be the home for all things home. We understand software engineering is a continuum; present is built on the past and the future will be built on the present. As we set up Angi to massively disrupt the home services market one of the major investment areas is to gear up our technical stack and practices to support Angi's new mission. We have embarked on a variety of new efforts to align both our teams and our culture through the development of values and coming together to tackle exciting challenges such as the re-brand to Angi. We appreciate your feedback and encourage you to reach out to our CTO, Kulesh, directly should you have any additional concerns that he can directly address. – Laura Kato, SVP People
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