ClockShark has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 35 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ClockShark employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).
- Lack of transparency.
- Unclear vision.
- You will likely be dangled a promotion carrot but never actually be promoted.
- When they do promote, it is purely based on how you fit in their clique rather than on your performance.
- You will be expected to lie to customers and see them as cash cows rather than clients who rely on your product to successfully run their business.
Overworked. Little support. You get in trouble for asking too many questions but they don’t train you. The management sucks, are passive aggressive, and talk about each other constantly. You’re required to do sales work but not get paid the sales commission.
Remote.
Pay above market value.
Flexibility.
Everybody outside the mobile team is very friendly.
I prefer Xam.Native over Xam.Forms so that was the inital appeal to me.
Documentation was above average.
App concepts and product serve real-world problems and thousands of daily active users made me feel like the work I was doing was important.
Cons
High turnover for xamarin. Has to do with existing codebase/devs. Someone quit my first week. Another quit after barely a month. By 3 months in I was the 3rd most senior xam dev there.
Unscalable code means copy pasting 100's of lines of db code just to hit a single endpoint and consume it on the service layer.
Someone will most likely just end up re-writing all of your code in code reviews because they prefer certain names over others.
Acquisition has lead to more product decisions. This is making product change directions faster than devs can code it because
CTO/Engineering lead doesn't really have a strong mobile background and there will significant pushback to any refactoring to make your job easier.
Heard talks about going back to forms after they had just gotten rid of the forms from their codebase.
Full manual regression testing every release reduced sprint capacity by significant amount.
DevOps was lacking for how often they wanted to release but I think they finally assigned a full time DevOps engineer to help out with that.
That was my last straw between that and family issues.
According to anonymously submitted Glassdoor reviews, ClockShark employees rate their compensation and benefits as 3.8 out of 5. Find out more about salaries and benefits at ClockShark. This rating has decreased by 2% over the last 12 months.
58% of ClockShark employees would recommend working there to a friend based on Glassdoor reviews. Employees also rated ClockShark 4.1 out of 5 for work life balance, 3.4 for culture and values and 3.0 for career opportunities.
Explore Glassdoor’s employee reviews to understand what current and former employees are saying about ClockShark redundancy and their outlook for job security at ClockShark in 2026.