Bluevine reviews

3.8

70% would recommend to a friend

(360 total reviews)
avatar

Eyal Lifshitz

77% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

Bluevine has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 360 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Bluevine employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Financial Services industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

360 reviews
1.0
Nov 26, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Catered lunches and health insurance

Cons

The company's operational culture is deeply problematic. There appears to be a top-down management philosophy that permeates the entire organization, creating an environment of intense scrutiny and control. This is exemplified by the implementation of comprehensive employee surveillance systems on all computers, resulting in a pervasive sense of being constantly monitored. A pronounced lack of consistency is a defining feature of the workplace. The portrayal of the company's culture during interviews and training is a fabricated ideal that does not align with reality. Management routinely makes false promises and establishes expectations that are never properly communicated. While an "open door" policy is officially promoted, attempts to utilize it are met with ridicule and hostility. Feedback is often dismissed with the claim that previous employees never reported such issues, a statement contradicted by numerous independent reviews on platforms like Glassdoor. The surveillance extends to automated systems that flag specific words or phrases used on our screens, triggering notifications to management. This fosters a climate of fear and scarcity, where employees are actively discouraged from discussing grievances with one another for fear of reprisal. Internal resources and training are inadequate and fail to set employees up for success. The company is extremely rigid in its policies, enforcing strict penalties for non-adherence. For instance, employees are penalized if they are away from their desks for more than four minutes per day, a policy that was defended with the suggestion that staff should alter their eating habits to reduce bathroom breaks. While benefits like catered lunches are offered, they come at the complete expense of personal autonomy. The training and "nesting" periods are disorganized, with leadership frequently providing conflicting or incorrect information. Management relies on scare tactics and explicitly discourages employees from sharing their grievances with each other, seemingly out of a fear that collective discussion will reveal the exploitative nature of the work environment. The commitment to anonymity is questionable at best. For example, daily surveys during the nesting period are supposed to be anonymous, yet screen-recording software is visibly active while the surveys are being completed, and given the company's full access to our systems, true anonymity seems impossible. This is just one example of the company's willingness to cross ethical lines. The disrespect extends to fundamental logistics. Despite promises of schedule flexibility made during hiring, employees are often left until the very last day of training without knowing their upcoming work schedule. Furthermore, expectations are frequently applied retroactively; rules are only revealed after a mistake has been made, and employees are still penalized. This creates a situation where individuals are trapped by a growing commitment before learning the full, disagreeable scope of company standards. The environment is a nightmare for any self-respecting adult, as a hypocritical standard is enforced on employees that management itself does not uphold. Employees are terrified to speak up, as doing so results not only in penalties but also in being publicly shamed and accused of failing to be a "company ambassador." Self-advocacy is framed as disloyalty. The requirement to sign a suite of documents, including a stringent NDA, upon hire feels like being forced to swear allegiance to a deeply dysfunctional system. The overall operation is an atrocious failure of corporate ethics and management.

1.0
Nov 5, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They had an awesome in office kitchen

Cons

Hired bunches of us, continued hiring at lower starting pay. In a zoom call with 400+ let us know 88 of us were laid off, but tool 15 to 30 minutes after the call to email those who were let go. Talked of growth opportunities 7 months prior to lay off, even some management was let go.

2.0
Aug 2, 2023

Stepping stone company

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent WLB depending on the team.

Cons

People are rude and unpleasant to work with here. No culture of collaboration. But it makes sense since most people have one foot out the door and are applying to other jobs. Pay is extremely under market.

Viewing 43 - 45 of 360 Reviews

Glassdoor has 370 Bluevine reviews submitted anonymously by Bluevine employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Bluevine is right for you.