Relaxed work environment
Friendly coworkers
Offer many bonding events and free lunches at the end of each month
Cons
If you work support, you will be micromanaged to death
Management doesn't listen to employees, is not supportive of your work and endeavors
Cherry picking easy work to boost your numbers is rewarded
Pay is below industry standard
MeridianLink Response
9y
Thank you for highlighting your concerns. We do feel that all of our employees (including our managers) bring valuable skills and expertise to their jobs here. We listen to all ideas, but cannot realistically implement them all.
We ask employees to grow on their team for two years before looking to move to other teams since we feel it’s fair to the rest of the team that an employee contributes for a while after time is spent training and coaching them. There is much room for growth and career advancement after demonstrating the required expertise/ability, a strong work ethic, leadership qualities and a positive attitude. A multitude of employees have been promoted to more senior levels or management roles within the Company - both on the Support team and across our organization.
High-paced organization on path to growth. Remote work is awesome but also plenty of opportunities to see co-workers in person. New leadership with eye to service and innovation. Company has been around for over 20 years but still operates like a start up so plenty of chances to have influence.
Cons
Competing priorities, sometimes budget is hard to come by. Slow planning process.
-Remote-first, WFH stipend, decent PTO, Great Place to Work Certified.
-Not too woke for a CA company.
-Recently went private which hopefully will be a good thing.
-Good work-life balance, I never work more than 40/week.
-If you like AI-assisted development, Github Copilot (for everyone) and Claude Code (for seniors) are provided.
-They haven't had layoffs since 2024.
Cons
-Revolving door of upper leadership. Brand new CTO; who knows what he'll do?
-Many dev teams are majority cheap offshore contractors. Minimal feeling of being on a team; I don't know most of my coworkers. No teambuilding activities.
-Reliance on poor metrics like code coverage and velocity. Managing by metrics and dashboards.
-Minimal salary raises.
-CEO sends out motivational "rah rah" emails every Friday.
-Disconnect between what developers are experiencing and what upper management thinks is going on.
-Company is going "all in" on AI, and have unrealistic expectations of what AI can accomplish. Like they think they can get A-level work out of C-level developers through AI usage. AI fatigue is real.
-Not all managers are emotionally intelligent or even technically adept.