Vantaggi
30 days time off Babbel Bike Nice colleagues
Svantaggi
Lack of transparency- Babbel prides itself on its “flat hierarchy.” This creates a culture where there is no clear ownership over anything, and the fault of this rests on the Individual Contributors (ICs). As a result, there now exists a culture of managers blaming their team for underperformance. Any feedback given is either ignored, or used to gaslight employees. As an employee, you are unable to ask a question to leadership and get a direct, honest answer (they often even lie). C Levels make rash decisions, often without consulting or notifying people that are involved, including line managers. Whole teams/departments are let go, without notice or clear reason. When ICs ask questions about it, they are berated. There is low trust in C levels after our 2019 layoffs, and yet they continue “restructuring” the company in silence. Employees often to find out through the grapevine, months before the anyone in a leadership position addresses these issues publicly. Sexism- Internal audits have shown that women are promoted less often and paid less than their male counterparts. C-Levels only verbally acknwoledge this problem, but have taken no steps to rectify it. C-Levels have forced women to step down from leadership positions without notice, and then publicly shamed them in front of the whole company (via email, and in ‘Exec AMA’ sessions). This is a trend I’ve observed over several years at Babbel. Strategy- The company strategy exists in theory, but teams are not given the resources they need to work towards the vision. There is no product roadmap, and as a result, Product teams are working in silos and coworking. Product teams are not given the resources they need to make any meaningful impact in the product. The core product experience has not changed in several years. Rather than fix known issues with the product, Babbel is releasing half thought-out features in an attempt to differentiate itself from the other apps, with very little quality control. The ‘quantity over quality’ approach is burning ICs out very quickly, because the more granular ‘vision’ of the app is constantly shifting, projects get dropped, and changes that do make it into product often have little to no impact. Low salary- In late 2019, Babbel began an internal review of its salary grid with the intention of bringing employees up to “market” Berlin rates. We are currently in mid-2021, and this salary grid update has not been shared with the company, and no one has been brought up to market value. Most people in my department are paid 30% (or more) below what they should be paid, and when anyone brings this issue up, C-Levels just say that they are ‘working on it.’ Of course, because of this, people are leaving. High churn- So many people are unhappy at Babbel, and as a result, are leaving or taking long sick leaves due to burnout. Some people in key positions have left (e.g., Head ofs, Director of), and the company seems to have no interest in replacing them, leaving entire teams without a manager, which is terrible for professional development.