Collectors reviews

3.6

56% would recommend to a friend

(139 total reviews)
avatar

Nat Turner

82% approve of CEO

64% positive business outlook

Collectors has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 139 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Collectors employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Arts, Entertainment & Recreation industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

139 reviews
3.0
Mar 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent pay at entry level Monthly motivational events

Cons

Depending on the department that you work in, the environment can be very toxic. Management does not hold themselves accountable to their actions like they do the actions of employees below them.

1.0
Mar 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A thriving business with brilliant minds working here! A whole network of geniuses in their own right in every org, just a Slack message away. The CEO has been consistently leading Collectors in a successful trajectory of increasingly higher company valuation, and the executive leadership working here is legitimately talented. If you join straight-away at a salary and position that both 1) Matches what you feel is a fair market value and 2) Is an appropriate role/title for the work you will actually be performing -- then you're in for an awesome time here. If you secure a position at Collectors matching the criteria I've just described, be prepared for an exciting professional challenge with some of the best coworkers ever; not to mention the stability of such a thriving enterprise, and you'll have all the fun (and "occasional" chaos) of a startup without the looming insolvency problems of startup culture.

Cons

There are good companies and there are smart companies. Collectors is quite smart. What I mean by good is fair market valuation; the number of IC's (and often managers) here who contribute well beyond their job description -- and are never compensated more than the egregious, statistical-outlier anomaly low-end salaries/hourly rates that Collectors offers -- is so high, that it can at times feel akin to a soul-crushing highway robbery. Collectors reinvests in its bottomline, not in its people. Not that it has a moral duty to. What I mean by "smart" is that this company will arbitrage the hell out of you, wring you out, hang a "maybe next year" promise over your head that keeps your hopes high long enough, until you realize that there are actual programmers and engineer-level skillset professionals here being paid less than fast food restaurant hourly pay-rates. This company is brilliant at yielding massive value from you if you choose to contribute beyond your role; from a first-person POV it is a brutal, financially disastrous, isolating experience to be every-day inching towards poverty based on the local cost-of-living rates, with no actual internal paths offered or solutions ever to be materialize no matter your output. But from an outside business perspective, it's actually quite a fascinating phenomenon of ROI on human capital/labor that they're accomplishing. I think it happens because, in actuality, Collectors is also a "unicorn" -- in the sense of, while this review states that this company invests "not in its people," this was speaking purely financially. In fact, the Workplace/HR/People does are excellent at their roles and do invest in people in terms of workplace culture; you can feel their impact tangibly, in how they help maintain quite an awesome/safe/professional working environment+experience here for all employees. A breath of fresh air compared to many other companies that don't such things as serious. TAKEAWAY: If you are joining for an entry-level role, and have no expectations/intent of performing technical work outside of your job description, this is an excellent stable job and you should absolutely take it as it is for as long as you need it. The office is quite nice, and again, you really cannot forget the friendliness of everyone here; it's a refreshing place to work in that regard. If you fit this category, you'll be part of the core 50% of people here in frontline operations who'll enjoy their time here (no job is perfect but the stability of this company right now is second-to-none, and is valuable in itself if you're generally happy with your pay for what you do). And if you are joining as an established/highly-qualified professional to begin with, FIGHT FOR YOUR FAIR STARTING SALARY BEFOREHAND! And if you get hired, you can re-read my review and see it's actually a 5-star review for the other 25% of people like yourself who will also have a great time here. To the other 25% of IC's/managers/and above who feel stuck, overworked, underpaid and undervalued, take it from me, because it's been 5 years and I'm starting to wonder how 5 years of my life just went past of "maybe next year." There is not a "maybe next year" fair-market compensation adjustment coming, so take the job for what it is, appreciate the genuinely exciting experience of being part of a diverse (well, generally diverse) corporate team at an innovative and hyper-niche company that is thriving, network with the geniuses you share the Slack channels with, and make the most of your time here -- but yes, you should almost certainly be planning your next move. I suppose 1-star may seem extreme. I do not dislike this company. However, my personal experience has led me to leave 1-star for the outstanding and shockingly bad (or, "smart") Grand Canyon-gaps of what you're paid and what your work is actually worth outside of Collectors. What a fascinating company. Not 3-stars or even 2-stars, because I genuinely do not believe this at times comically absurd issue will ever be fixed; it has wrung out several burnt-out, disillusioned professionals at all levels of the company from specialists to management and beyond; it's the silent problem no one talks about here, and in fact, it seems like it's not even a problem; it's a feature. NOTE: In the age of ChatGPT/LLM's, this review was an AI-free, hand-written/impromptu/honest reflection, and the statements presented here reflect only the lived professional experience of the reviewer. They should not be interpreted as negative commentary on, or dismissal of, the legitimate complexities leadership must navigate around margins, pay bands, leveling frameworks, internal equity constraints, market cycles, or headcount planning. Rather, this review simply attempts to document, candidly and from a human perspective, how those realities can manifest for the individuals operating within them.

Viewing 7 - 9 of 139 Reviews

Glassdoor has 148 Collectors reviews submitted anonymously by Collectors employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Collectors is right for you.