Amazing place to work! - Anonymous employee X Employee Review

5.0
Mar 14, 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I loved working at Twitter because the culture felt similar to living in a city but knowing everyone at the local markets, and EVERYONE was so friendly. The atmosphere sets up the opportunity to meet others, collaborate on ideas, and feel at home to be there as long as you need in order to get your work done. I loved the opportunities to be a part of different activities outside of the normal job, ie. Community Service, Hackweek, Fitness, etc. It was another great way to meet others outside of your team!

Cons

The toughest part of working at the company was that things were always changing. It made it the best part if you could adapt and pivot really quickly, but it was tough if a person wasn't used to it or wanted normalcy!

Explore other reviews about X

5.0
Jun 11, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

great community for web engineers. lots of mentorship available sessions to knowledge share really helped with growth

Cons

lots of projects do not make it to production lots of hoops before projects have a chance to be developed or make it hopefully to production

1.0
Jul 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free lunches. Most of the colleagues were nice.

Cons

Vague feedback & lack of structured support: Bi-weekly 1-on-1s tend to be repetitive and lack actionable substance. When mistakes occur, the standard protocol is a vague directive to "review the guidelines" rather than a collaborative review of the actual error. There is a missed opportunity to pair struggling agents with peers for hands-on learning and mentorship. Subjective conflict resolution: Team issues and workflow disruptions are sometimes met with personal assumptions from management (framing issues as a "lack of trust" among peers) rather than objective investigation. Ignoring reported operational issues simply because a manager "wasn't present" to witness them stalls team progress. Sharing constructive details with both parties would allow the team to learn and move forward professionally. Ambush-style offboarding & lack of progressive discipline: The termination process lacks fair, progressive discipline. Rather than addressing performance concerns or alleged errors through transparent, ongoing feedback or structured improvement plans, management tends to weaponize past learning curves (which were previously resolved and followed by praised performance) during the final exit meeting. Dismissing employees abruptly without prior, documented warnings is incredibly damaging to team morale, especially for those managing high-stress workloads in child safety and platform integrity.

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