Poor culture - Anonymous employee Riveron Employee Review

1.0
Dec 2, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote work which is much appreciated these days

Cons

Poor culture driven by PE only purpose (profit) ready to crash employees

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Riveron Response
6mo
Thank you for sharing your feedback. We’re sorry to hear that your experience has not reflected the culture we strive to create, particularly given your long tenure with the firm. We do appreciate your recognition of the flexibility remote work provides. While Riveron is focused on performance and growth, our intent is not to do so at the expense of our people. We continue to invest in leadership development, communication, and listening forums — including regular Pulse Surveys — to better understand concerns and take meaningful action. We value honest feedback and encourage ongoing dialogue with leadership or HR, so we can continue working toward a culture grounded in respect, balance, and accountability.

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Flexibility Opportunity Sharp colleagues Additional incentives

Cons

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1.0
Apr 9, 2026
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CEO approval
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Pros

Decent swag and they have education stipends. Allows remote work which was very appreciated.

Cons

Too political and heavy on finger-pointing rather than collaboration. Blame often falls on inexperienced staff for issues beyond their control, while "who you know" (especially in the Texas office) dictates accountability. Additionally, the US team’s subconscious bias toward the India team creates a counterproductive and unwelcome environment. It ultimately feels like a fend-for-yourself environment. When performance is evaluated, support is limited unless you’ve already proven you can meet management’s demanding, often unrealistic, expectations. This makes it especially difficult for early-career professionals to learn and grow. The focus tends to be more on maximizing billable hours than on development or quality of work. In some cases, there has even been pressure from multiple managers to inflate timesheet entries to improve the appearance of performance and increase client billing, despite work being completed efficiently. These expectations were consistently communicated verbally rather than documented, raising serious ethical concerns and making the situation even more discouraging.

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