Relativity reviews

3.4

60% would recommend to a friend

(529 total reviews)
avatar

Phil Saunders

75% approve of CEO

58% positive business outlook

Relativity has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 529 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Relativity employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

529 reviews
1.0
May 29, 2020

Smoke and Mirrors - Beware

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Perks - snacks/food and beverages Good benefits - insurance and PTO

Cons

Manager determines your future. Very poor management and ‘boys club’. Lots of Kool Aid. Deceitful management and will use one mistake (even if you are new and have had almost no training) as a determinant of your future. Once that happens, no matter what you do, you will be micromanaged and shot down any chance they get. Everyone is out for themselves and upper management has its favorites, so avoid interacting with them...some of those favorites will go out of their way to sabotage and throw you under the bus, but it is OK when they have “hiccups” or “my bads.”

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Relativity Response
6y
Thank you for sharing your feedback, and I’m sorry to hear that you did not have a consistently positive experience during your time at Relativity. Our intent is to nurture a culture of continuous feedback, and we encourage employees to speak openly and honestly with their managers about their development goals and their career aspirations. Our 360 Manager Feedback process enables employees to share their honest and constructive feedback to help managers identify where they can improve to better support their team members. Regarding your observations around the behaviors of our leaders and managers, we are committed to fostering an inclusive and diverse environment to foster better decision-making and people management across the organization. Further, our approach to hiring is rooted in building diverse talent pipelines—including our leadership recruiting practices. What you outline in your feedback is not the environment we strive to create. I invite and strongly encourage employees to reach out to me or to their HR business partner if they are experiencing challenges in approaching or communicating with their manager so we can work on a resolution together. – Beth Clutterbuck, CHRO
2.0
Nov 9, 2015

Feeling kCurious? Proceed with Caution!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A development environment with a startup culture and some really smart people: if you love .Net programming, you'll be in your element. Pay is competitive for many job titles; standard benefits (apart from sick days); and recently stock grants for employees that could be worth something sometime in the future when the company goes public. The company has been growing like gangbusters over the last few years and is intent on dominating the industry. The bottom line is solid. Great location in the landmark Bank of America building in the Loop, and the company has invested a lot into making its office space top-notch. The parties are awesome and the CEO knows how to have fun: Andrew is a genuinely good guy with a big heart, and he likes everything to be grand and beautiful. There's also cool perks, like iPads for everyone, free fruit, coffee, and soda, ping pong table and arcade machines in the cafeteria, and even mini-golf on the premises. To summarize, there's a lot to kCura, and the house that Andrew Sieja built could become a home for you, if you play your cards right. But...

Cons

While there are some brilliant people at kCura, especially in the development organization, there's also a ton of incompetence throughout the company. Dealing with inexperience of recent college grads in management positions can be exasperating. To go along with that, there is a mortifying amount of unprofessional behavior and personal immaturity: For example, there is one manager who plays pranks with a fart machine in the office and takes a lively interest in the bowel movements of his colleagues. I have seen emails and IMs with inappropriate subject matter and abusive language. There is bullying and plain rudeness. And like many other reviews on this site note, favoritism and cliques are all over the place. Some departments are worse than others. For example, time reporting requirements in Operations are the most brutal I have seen anywhere in my career: you have to account for work time for up to five-minute increments and report at least 7.5 hours every day. It’s called “Case Time.” For a company that aspires to be cool and hip and sees itself among the Googles of the world, this should be embarrassing. If all of this doesn't scare you, proceed with caution. Make sure you get a clear idea of the department you are being hired into and it’s not one of those where you have to do Case Time. Negotiate tough, make sure your salary and title are in line with your career expectations, and ask for plenty of vacation time. Good luck!

1.0
Jul 3, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I don't have many "pro" comments to list, unfortunately. On paper, it appears to be an exciting company with great technology, but you quickly forget about that as you get swamped by the training program.

Cons

Nearly every new employee (pretty much everybody but admin people) gets put through an excruciating 6-week training program, and they have to pass a very difficult certification test at the end of it to stay at the company. I've never seen anything remotely like it. The training period is an extremely stressful ordeal. Sure, they give you an iPad, but early on they drop a number of large documents for you to read and learn, and before you have enough time to get through them there's more, and then more and more after that. It's an impossibly large amount of information to assimilate. There are night study sessions you have to attend, and eventually you become completely obsessed with passing their certification, to the exclusion of everything else in your life, like your family. You have to learn every nook and cranny of their pretty large software application. For the certification, you have to be able to correctly execute 5 intricate, intentionally mis-ordered 30+-step procedures in their app, then answer a very long series of highly detailed multiple-choice questions. It smacks of age discrimination, as I think that only a young person would be able to successfully assimilate the gigantic amount of information they throw at you. (Nearly all of the surviving employees are younger than me; I'm 50. Being 50 should be an asset, not a liability, but not at kCura.) Because of what they put their new employees through, I feel that this company definitely does not belong on the Tribune's annual "best places to work" list that it always makes.

Viewing 13 - 15 of 529 Reviews

Glassdoor has 583 Relativity reviews submitted anonymously by Relativity employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Relativity is right for you.