Fast growing company - Product Manager Paycor Employee Review

5.0
Aug 16, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paycor is an exciting place to work with plenty of opportunities for self-driven individuals to contribute towards improving the business and customers lives. While the pace can feel overwhelming at times, there is never a boring day and the work life balance is great (granted you are good at setting boundaries and stay organized). The benefits are decent and Paycor puts a lot of thought into caring for their people as much as a company can. The executive leadership team is really coming together and providing a strong vision for our future and focusing on the right things (increasing DE&I, strategic planning, customer retention, etc).

Cons

As with any company, there are pockets of teams where the management & culture can be tough but overall the company culture is a positive one. There are opportunities to shift to a more customer & data focused model instead of responding the sales escalations and loud customers but slowly seeing improvements towards getting there. There are opportunities in their knowledge/content management and how communications are shared but that is a common problem is many organizations.

Explore other reviews about Paycor

5.0
Jul 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote-first company, flexible hours, very realistic/understanding that human beings work here, not automatons.

Cons

I have none. Honestly. Happiest I've been as an employee in any job I've ever had.

1.0
Jun 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paycheck hits on time every two weeks.

Cons

I wanted to like working at Paycor. The product has potential and the pitch during the interview process sounded promising. But the reality of day-to-day life here is a far cry from what's advertised. Micromanagement is rampant. Leadership tracks every minute of your day — from login times to bathroom breaks — yet somehow trusts no one to make even the smallest decision independently. You're treated like a number, not a professional. There's zero autonomy, and any attempt to take initiative is quickly shut down. The leadership team is deeply out of touch. Many managers got their roles through tenure, not merit, and it shows. They struggle to answer basic questions about the industry, lean on buzzwords in meetings, and consistently make decisions that anyone with relevant experience would know to avoid. When things go wrong, blame rolls downhill fast. The culture is toxic and cliquey. If you're not in the right social circle, advancement is nearly impossible. Favoritism is blatant, feedback is rarely constructive, and the "open door policy" is a joke — speak up and you'll find yourself quietly pushed out. The work environment doesn't help either. High turnover means institutional knowledge constantly walks out the door. Morale is low, burnout is high, and HR seems more interested in protecting the company than the employees.

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