Vantaggi
In my first interview with RealPage in the fall of 2005 I asked, "Just put me in play". And that they did. From there I have been able to experience multiple roles within the organization from Sales, Sales Engineering, Client Success, etc. Are there issues? Of course, it's a public company with over 4500 employees. But the pros outweigh the cons by far. I am incredibly proud to have been a part of RealPage, twice. I was given amazing opportunities to learn multiple areas of our industry. I left RP for two years and came back when offered a management position in Client Success. I was given management responsibilities of local and off-shore teams. My leadership gave me the tools I needed to take care of my people and our division. Like anything you have to go after your opportunities. If you are one to complain about compensation, management, benefits, etc. then be a part of a solution - RP gives you the space to do so. I have left to explore other companies because that is something personally I believe is good for my career and overall growth. I value the people, the friendships and the hard work I know so many people devote to RP every day. As far as culture - I believe it is what you make it. My leadership allowed me to develop the culture of my team and encouraged me by listening, guiding and mentoring me along the way.
Svantaggi
I am not a fan of the current Salary planning and agree that RP should offer current employees the same that they would offer new candidates, but I believe this is something currently being reviewed by leadership. And to be fair, if I did have a request outside of salary planning parameters my leadership was always open to reviewing.
Vantaggi
Team work and collaboration is key within our team.
Svantaggi
The job is fast pace which I like but I know some find it hard to keep up.
Vantaggi
Good engineering tooling. Talented engineers and teammates. Flexible remote work.
Svantaggi
I ran one of RealPage's larger engineering product teams for three years, hiring and developing more than half of the engineering managers and engineers on my organization. I believed I was building something that mattered. Instead of promoting the person already doing the work, leadership hired a lateral engineering manager alongside me. Over time, responsibility stayed with me while authority and support shifted elsewhere. I became the person expected to absorb every problem. My first manager used me to fill every gap instead of developing me. I was expected to handle support, incident response, production releases, coding, architecture, project management, and people management—all at the same time. My second manager sidelined me, criticized me, and focused on replacing me instead of developing me. I was once told I was "lucky to be useful, or I wouldn't still be here." That statement summed up the culture. Leadership expected constant availability while frequently being unavailable themselves. When leadership was out, I was expected to cover. I spent over a year supporting both U.S. and India time zones, making true time off nearly impossible. RealPage has incredibly talented people, but talented employees cannot overcome a culture where managers are consumed instead of developed. I loved building teams. I just wish the company had valued the people who built them.