Whereoware reviews

2.5

32% would recommend to a friend

(80 total reviews)

Eric Dean

Not enough data to show CEO approval

26% positive business outlook

Whereoware has an employee rating of 2.5 out of 5 stars, based on 80 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Whereoware employee rating is 35% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

80 reviews
1.0
Aug 7, 2020

The floor is lava

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good job for people out of college without experience. Remote work. Fun on boarding process. Good for people that like very fast paced projects. Good for people that want to learn about web production and marketing.

Cons

The company is in a constant rush to make money.. this creates a stressful environment for employees. They have been in business for more than a decade but they have never been able to really succeed outside of a small B2B market or get their act together. After all these years they are still trying to figure out how to run things properly. There are constant layoffs.. very cliquey and closed minded about new ideas. Everything has to be done their way or you are out. High pressure projects that are always on fire. You always feel like you could lose your job and that’s no way to live. Most of the leadership has no real experience and only cares to please the owners of the company. The office is the worse as all of the owners are in their offices with glass walls and are able to see your every movement. Pay is terrible and they mix sick time with pto. Benefits are below average and no bonuses. Just know they are in a constant rush to produce money for the owners so deadlines are unrealistically small. Most normal people wont last more than a few months . There is a constant fear that you will be fired at any time. Not a job for you if you are looking for stability. Since they fire everyone they don't like, they have to outsource most of their labor to Russia. The Russian developers can barely speak proper english so it makes it very hard to get anything done. They have timesheets that need to be filled up to quarter increments. It's incredibly stressful to be micromanaged to that level... and if there is no work for you.. they let you go. They are also new to the whole working remotely since Covid so they are not very good at life/work balance. Expect long late hours and early mornings. There is no respect for personal time outside of work. They also don't pay for extra time worked. Pms will message you at odd hours for status updates. There is also no career development unless you play hardcore office politics. People talk behind your back and HR loves the drama. They have the favorite employees that have been there forever. Somehow many of the leaders have been there for years without any real experience. So moving up in the company will be extremely hard.

1.0
Apr 1, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Pay was good. - Benefits were good. - The people, those actually doing the work, are great. - Fully remote.

Cons

Management Style - Micro-Management: There's a strict policy of tracking time in 15-minute increments. For full-time employees, failing to log 40 hours will result in negative repercussions, however, there's no incentive or compensation for working more than 40 hours. Time must be attributed to a ticket. Sometimes a ticket isn't provided and you're reprimanded for incorrectly logging time. Leadership Issues - Disconnect with Operations: Leadership is so far disconnected from day-to-day operations and rely on teams to solve problems without offering any solutions themselves or giving any type of support or direction. - Lack of Support: There's little to no leadership support for work related problems or career advancements. The pressure is put on the teams to figure out themselves. - Accountability Problems: Leadership will attribute project failures solely to the project team without taking responsibility, even when the project was poorly sold, poorly organized, and setup to fail from the beginning. - Repeated failures: I've noticed a cycle where people complain and voice their concerns, people leave or get laid off, leadership comes together saying they'll help solve the problems, no progress is made to solve the major issues but people wait for a few months to see progress, and the cycle continues. Since joining the company I've seen two rounds of layoffs. The most recent round they continued to secretly lay off employees for months even after the initial round "stopped the bleeding". Employee Support and Recognition - Limited Recognition: There's no meaningful recognition system for individual contributions. There's small token gestures like verbal recognitions but no tangible bonuses outside of Bonusly. And Bonusly is only used by employees, however, the pay-out is very small. - Advancement Challenges: Work for the job you want, not the one you have but there's no guarantee you'll get the job you want. There's no clear advancement paths for any role. Compensation is coupled to years of experience and job title, not job description. - Training and higher education support: If you want to pursue education, trainings, or certifications you have to figure it out yourself. You can get reimbursed for paid career advancements, however, you must work 2 full years at the company after completion or you have to pay it back. Work Environment - High Expectations: High expectations to perform but no direction or training. You can lean on your team members but everyone is too busy to provide meaningful help. If a team member can help, their "utilization rate" drops and that negatively affects them. You must be working on client billable work to not bring any attention to yourself. - Lack of team structure: Often you'll work on an island and there won't be anyone that can help you if you need it. If there is a "team", everyone has separate disciplines so your team likely won't be able to help you. - No documentation or training materials: If you're introduced to an existing project, you'll have no documentation or training materials to help you. Often, you'll be working with old, legacy code and expected to work with it in fear of charging clients any amount of money to improve their setup. Work-Life Balance - Lack of Balance: There's no work life balance. They say you're free to take breaks and tend to personal life during work hours, but they offer no support in flexing your timesheet without using personal time off. It must be 8 hours a day of client work or your utilization rate is negatively impacted. - Personal Time Off: They advertise "flexible PTO" but are super strict on when you use it and how long you're out. PTO can be denied when too many members of the same team request off if it may impact client work. They offer no flexibility to work with clients to set expectations of slow periods to allow these team members to take the time off they need. - Burn out: Majority of employees I interacted with complained about burn out. Many admitted they've sought medical help for a decline in cognitive abilities due to the stress of working here.

1.0
Mar 15, 2024

Beware-o-ware!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Not much to say - the pay was decent and I met a couple nice people. If you like working in a back-stabby, mean girls kind of environment, this is your place!

Cons

• No stability. They hire and fire a lot. People just disappear and are never mentioned again. • Micromanagement galore! It is hard to do your job because there are always upper management people swooping in to tell you what to do. • Process changes weekly. There is a ton of ridiculous process here and when upper management randomly changes it, you are expected to drop everything and comply immediately. • This company uses a lot of offshore contractors. Sometimes you get one that is good, but more often they aren't. Also, they do not employ enough resources, so you are constantly fighting to get people to work on your projects. And then you are punished when the work isn't done. • Truly horrible upper management. Several of them clearly have no clue what they are doing and have never worked anywhere other than this monstrosity of a company, so they have tunnel vision and no idea how to actually be effective. • People here will actively throw you under the bus at every turn. They are constantly "escalating" things instead of acting like adults and having productive conversations. • Clique culture. If you aren't in the cool kids club from day one you won't last long. Many super mean women will make life miserable. • Not sure how they have any clients at this point. Seemed like 90% of the projects were completely off the rails with angry clients and very low budgets. In conclusion, this was by far the absolute worst work experience I have ever had. RUN.

Viewing 13 - 15 of 80 Reviews

Glassdoor has 83 Whereoware reviews submitted anonymously by Whereoware employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Whereoware is right for you.