Torch Technologies reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(200 total reviews)
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John Watson

71% approve of CEO

62% positive business outlook

Torch Technologies has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 200 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Torch Technologies employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aerospace & Defense industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

200 reviews
1.0
Dec 6, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Hiring process was pretty smooth. HR followed up and got me in the system without major issues. • Team members are supportive. Most of us are just trying to do a good job in a tough environment. • There’s a lot of talk about “ownership” and ESOPs, which sounds good at first.

Cons

• The pay doesn’t match the workload or the skills required. I’ve taken on more projects than I was originally scoped for, and it’s not clear when (or if) that will be recognized. • There’s pressure to do more with less. Expectations keep rising, but salary stays frozen. If you speak up, you’re reminded how “lucky” you are to have a job. • Leadership seems stuck in the past. Suggestions to modernize workflows are often ignored or brushed off. Some decision-makers think Excel can solve everything. • Contractor well-being isn’t prioritized. During the shutdown, we weren’t allowed to take unpaid leave. You either burn your PTO or don’t get paid. No middle ground. • ESOP is confusing for newer employees. It’s often framed as a major benefit, but it feels like smoke and mirrors when your paycheck can’t keep up with rent or inflation. • Not a lot of long-term vision. It’s hard to see a career path here beyond quietly doing more and hoping someone notices.

1.0
Sep 28, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Benefits were standard for a mid-sized defense contractor. Medical, dental, 401(k), and PTO structure all fell within industry norms. • Recruiter and HR staff were responsive and courteous throughout the hiring and on-boarding process. • The posted mission (AI/ML enablement, ISR, edge analytics) was inspiring on paper. It aligned with current federal AI modernization goals, even if that never materialized in practice.

Cons

• Compensation fell short of expectations. Compared to peer roles in similar federal-facing data environments, the available pay bands where states require salary transparency (around $115K–145K) felt misaligned with the expertise requested. This was especially noticeable for roles demanding advanced clearances, DevSecOps familiarity, and AI/ML fluency. • The position was terminated quickly. Although on-boarding was completed and work had begun, customer-side funding was withdrawn within months. There was no transition plan, no redeployment support, and no internal alternatives presented. The role ended abruptly following an ominous message to report in person. • Scope creep without structure. During on-boarding, added responsibilities, including stakeholder interfacing and technical coordination were assigned informally. However, there was no change in role title, pay, or authority. In comparable firms, that level of contribution would typically receive formal recognition. • Ambiguity around roles and reporting. Requests for project documentation, KPIs, or clarity were often met with silence. Leadership described the company as one where management hierarchies “don’t really apply,” and where employees are expected to “grow into” leadership roles like in the military. That may work in some contexts, but not in AI/ML environments that depend on structure and clarity. • Tooling was dated relative to the mission. The role was advertised as cloud-native and AI-driven, but in practice, legacy systems and outdated workflows dominated. While listings mentioned TensorFlow, AWS, and agile methods, the reality was spreadsheets and stovepipes. • Exit process lacked structure. Once funding disappeared, so did the job with no formal off-boarding, postmortem, or transition assistance. For a company that emphasizes employee-ownership, it was a missed opportunity to demonstrate internal support. • ESOP value was unclear. In theory, employee-ownership should promote continuity and transparency. In practice, it felt symbolic particularly when organizational disruptions occurred. Compared to other employee-owned firms, the cultural execution felt weak. • Branding didn’t match execution. While the company promotes itself as a modern defense tech firm, the actual day-to-day felt more like a legacy contractor still catching up to current data strategy and transformation demands.

2.0
Jul 25, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture is good - ESOP is a big benefit.

Cons

Advertises paid military leave but the reality is Military leave is unpaid, especially if you make anywhere close to your salary on the military side.

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