Alignable Reviews

3.6

56% would recommend to a friend

(29 total reviews)

Eric Groves

66% approve of CEO

62% positive business outlook

Alignable has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 29 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Alignable employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

29 reviews
3.0
23 Dec 2021

Good for early career devs, not a fit for me

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The mission of helping small businesses was truly evident and created a level of passion among many of the employees that you may not see elsewhere. The people were great - people cared, were friendly, were always willing to help. Lots of great employees with varying experience to learn from. Very open organization - anyone can (and was encouraged to) look at data, talk to customer, ask questions about the product, provide suggestions, etc. If you were really interested in a certain area, you could very likely get involved in some form of fashion there. The culture committee did a great job of keeping people connected while being fully remote. The swag was pretty sweet, including a Patagonia sweater. Benefits were decent. Unlimited PTO, decent health/benefits. They were fairly generous in the purchase of office supplies for a company of their size. There wasn't an official budget for education but if you could make the case for something helping your role, they would support you. My work life balance was pretty good - though I know this varied greatly. The team was very open in terms of when you work. There were shared hours for meetings for collaboration but parents would often pop out in the middle day for kid pickup, and non-parents could likewise take time to run an errand here and there and make up the work later. Many of the 5 star reviews on Glassdoor came from engineering interns. The intern/co-op process is very well developed and given many of the engineers came from this program, they are very supportive and understand the types of projects that will create a positive experience. I would guess those who are happiest at Alignable are IC devs. Lots of cool opportunities in the product and lots of users since the product has been around for over 8 years. Many users who are also willing to talk and tell their interesting stories.

Cons

Logistics: There is no HR department - one of the founders takes this on, no 401k match, and no documented parental policy (they will work with you, but I would have rather it written down). My biggest struggle was working with the founders and the culture they created among the exec team that trickled down. To sum it up, they did not follow servant leadership principles. - Shiny object syndrome was strong here and as a result, prioritization was all over the place. The answer to this or that was always both. - They used their veto power pretty much any time they disagreed with a decision. There was even a hire made by one of the founders that everyone else on the hiring panel said no too. - Their communication style when people did not agree with them was often aggressive and patronizing. - They often said contradictory things and didn't seem to know what they wanted. It's fine if you want to be a top-down company, but do what you say. Don't say you want empowered teams and then override every decision you disagree with. Don't tell people to make the decision and then reprimand them when they do. - The exec team, to their credit, often recognized when things went sideways and would have discussions about how to fix it. This was great until the next time a similar situation arose and it was like that past conversation never happened. It's like if your significant other constantly cheats on you, and they apologize after every time. It's some consolation they feel bad, but you take it less seriously when they repeat the behavior. The great resignation is real, but when employees leave, it is an opportunity to learn how to do better. I had hoped to give this feedback privately but did not receive an exit interview and have heard many others didn't as well. I rarely got the sense they were willing to look inward and reflect on how they could do better; it was always not a fit, or the employee's personal issue, or some external factor.

2.0
21 Dec 2021

Notice where the highest turnover is

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I got to work with some impressive and insanely smart people who were all motivated to help small businesses, and it felt good to have a shared mission and colleagues to learn from. The management team has a great eye for hiring talent. Junior employees get exposure and opportunity to be very involved, even promoted, as long as they don't push back too hard.

Cons

Like a startup cliche, the co-founders don't know how to delegate and let the company grow. There's a culture of micromanagement that puts employees in unwinnable scenarios where they're told to "own it" and drive forward their vision, then being stripped of any ability to make decisions and execute as they see fit. Over and over I saw the company hire smart, experienced, accomplished people who could elevate their part of the organization, and then saw them leave because they found themselves doing junior level work and unable to operate as directors and senior managers or higher. Management can't seem to hand over the reins so they treat senior employees like junior employees until those employees start to wonder if maybe they're incompetent. Outdated tools and an allergy to change make it very hard to try new things. There's a lot of testing but not a lot of insight. And real insight gets ignored when the founding team has an idea they are fixated on. People get shamed in front of colleagues on company wide calls. Praise happens occasionally, arbitrarily, but not often enough. Wins don't get celebrated and effective employees walk around thinking they're doing a horrible job. There is no work life balance at all. Working weekends, holidays, vacations is expected even though management says otherwise. When your workload is overwhelming because of unreasonable expectations or a lack of tools and resources, their only solution is to find someone else to dump your work on. Negative feedback in employee surveys is repeatedly ignored. Honesty is punished. The best thing to do for your career there is to always agree with the ceo and work 7 days/week with no complaints. It's run like a pet project more than a company. If you actually care about helping small businesses in some practical way, this place is not the way to do it. Your hiring manager will probably say bad things about your coworkers on your first day. If someone leaves, management will say they were just not a good fit. But the people leaving who aren't a good fit are getting jobs at better companies because they are great at what they do. Yet somehow it is always everyone else who is in the wrong, never the founders. When I started and read some old negative reviews here I thought there's no way things are still the same. You can learn from my mistake.

1.0
18 Feb 2017

Run far far away

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The fact that I no longer work there. If you're looking to be micro-managed in a toxic work environment, this is the place for you.

Cons

It truly is amazing this company is still in existence. There is no strategy, management doesn't want people to have opinions, priorities change 100 times a day, expected to work around the clock, and extremely toxic environment where founders "know best" and throw everyone under the bus.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 29 Reviews

Glassdoor has 39 Alignable reviews submitted anonymously by Alignable employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Alignable is right for you.