Vantaggi
This is genuinely the happiest I’ve been in a role in years. The company moves fast, expectations are high, and there is always a lot to do, but the difference is that the work feels meaningful and the people around you actually care. Leadership is in the trenches with the team. The founders work incredibly hard and expect a lot, but they hold themselves to the exact same standard. That creates a culture of mutual respect instead of the usual “rules for thee, not for me” dynamic that exists at a lot of companies.
The people here are exceptionally smart and constantly raising the bar for each other in a healthy way. There’s a strong bias toward action and problem solving. Teams are always looking for ways to improve, move faster, win deals, launch better ideas, and create real impact. It’s one of the few places I’ve worked where high performance and low ego genuinely coexist. Nobody cares about sounding important or protecting turf. Good ideas win, regardless of title.
There’s also very little tolerance for “this is how it’s always been done” thinking. If you can improve something, you’re encouraged to challenge it and build a better way. That makes the environment incredibly energizing for people who like building and competing. You can take meaningful projects from idea to execution without months of bureaucracy slowing everything down.
The CEO is intense, competitive, and has an extremely high bar, but he is also genuine and deeply invested in the business and the people. He expects people to care because he cares a lot himself. For driven people, especially those who miss having a real competitive outlet in adulthood, this environment can be incredibly fulfilling. Working in tech here honestly feels like showing up to a championship game every day. You are expected to perform, contribute, and think critically. Personally, I love that.
Svantaggi
This is not the right environment for everyone. The pace is fast, priorities can change quickly, and there’s a high level of accountability. If you prefer highly structured environments with rigid processes and slower decision-making, this could feel overwhelming.
The company has gone through significant growth over the last couple of years, and with that came real growing pains. Some of the older negative reviews likely came from periods where teams were stretched thin and processes had not fully caught up to the pace of growth.
Leadership expects people to be engaged, adaptable, and solutions-oriented. People who want to stay comfortably inside a narrowly defined role or who struggle with direct feedback probably won’t enjoy the environment long term.