Correspondent Lending - Anonymous employee Texas Capital Employee Review

4.0
Apr 4, 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great Bank, great C-Level, great fulfillment

Cons

Toxic sales leadership and frequent irrational compensation changes.

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Texas Capital Response
7y
Thank you for your feedback. Texas Capital Bank takes great pride in our positive work environment and total rewards structure. Each year the bank conducts an annual workplace survey to gather employee feedback and implement action plans, where appropriate, to ensure engagement levels remain high. The bank also participates in several compensation studies to ensure our compensation strategies continue to be market competitive. If you have specific concerns, we encourage you to talk with management or Human Resources.

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5.0
Apr 23, 2026
Anonymous employee
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CEO approval
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Pros

Pays well for hard work

Cons

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1.0
Mar 5, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some talented engineers and team members who try to do the right thing despite constant organizational friction.

Cons

The technology organization suffers from a lack of strong engineering leadership and accountability. Managers often avoid making firm technical or project decisions, which leads to shifting priorities and unclear direction. When initiatives struggle, responsibility is frequently pushed downward onto engineers rather than addressed at the leadership level. There has also been noticeable turnover across engineering teams while leadership continues pushing a model where only a small number of onshore “lead engineers” remain while much of the development work moves offshore. In practice this creates bottlenecks where engineers complete work during normal hours but cannot move code forward until offshore teams review and approve pull requests. Leadership has also introduced initiatives without realistic planning. When internal AI tooling was introduced, expectations around productivity were abruptly changed (for example, reducing story point estimates under the assumption AI would accelerate development). At the same time, engineering resources were directed toward building an internal AI assistant that largely functions as a wrapper around existing models while higher-priority platform work remains under-resourced. Culturally, the environment can feel dismissive toward engineers. Turnover remains high, concerns raised by teams are rarely addressed, and negative feedback about the organization has been consistent for years without meaningful change from upper management.

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