Good company - Software Engineer Buildium Employee Review

4.0
13 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great engineering team that values you and your time. Nurtures learning and collaboration.

Cons

Real page acquisition. Buildium tries to maintain autonomy but real page keeps trying to change culture and processes and it gets annoying

Explore other reviews about Buildium

5.0
29 June 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company cares about its employees Plenty of room for advancement Quick growth avenues True team work

Cons

Low starting pay Certain roles don’t advance as fast bc no one leaves

1.0
8 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You'll learn some of the basics of cash accounting.

Cons

I joined Buildium as a Product Support Engineer thinking I’d be providing technical support for their property management software. What I actually got was a high-volume call center job with unrealistic expectations, abysmal working conditions, and zero regard for employee well-being. If you’re considering a support role here, do yourself a massive favor and RUN from this company before you waste any time or mental energy. The environment is straight out of a boiler-room call center. You’re expected to be plugged into a headset for the vast majority of your shift with barely any breaks. Management breathes down your neck with relentless micromanagement—monitoring every call handle time, after-call work, customer satisfaction score, and even how long you stay in “not ready” status. There’s zero trust or autonomy. It creates a stressful, demoralizing atmosphere where you’re constantly on edge, afraid to even step away for a quick bio break or a moment to collect your thoughts between calls. This isn’t modern tech support; it’s old-school surveillance disguised as “performance management.” The customer interactions make the job truly unsustainable. Property managers and owners expect you to have full CPA-level expertise on complex bookkeeping, accounting principles, tax implications, and financial reporting. It wasn’t uncommon to spend 30–45 minutes on a single call not troubleshooting the software, but literally walking clients through how to balance their own ledgers, reconcile accounts, or fix basic financial errors that should have been handled by their own accountants. You end up providing unpaid accounting consulting on top of product support. This mismatch between what the software actually does and what customers demand puts way too much burden on the support team. The business model is fundamentally broken and not scalable long-term. Buildium’s support model feels years behind the competition. AppFolio figured this out a long time ago by shifting to chat-based support, which is far more efficient for both agents and customers. It allows for better documentation, multitasking, and far less vocal and mental exhaustion than back-to-back phone calls. Buildium stubbornly clings to voice support in 2026, and the result is exactly what you’d expect: higher burnout, lower-quality interactions, and frustrated customers who feel rushed because agents are just trying to survive the queue. Tax season takes this nightmare to another level. For roughly three straight months you’re expected to be on non-stop phone calls from 8 AM to 7 PM (or later), day after day, with almost zero downtime between calls. The volume is relentless, customers are panicked about deadlines, and the pressure never lets up. It’s physically and mentally exhausting, destroys any semblance of work-life balance, and leaves you dreading every single workday. Compensation was nowhere near high enough for the level of stress, specialized knowledge required, or hours demanded. Even after I moved up to the senior support team, I received zero raise whatsoever. To add insult to injury, I was still expected to handle a full load of regular phone support calls on top of the elevated senior-level responsibilities. My overall workload and capacity essentially doubled with no additional pay or relief. It felt like a bait-and-switch “promotion” designed to extract more labor without rewarding the people doing the heavy lifting. Management was absolutely abhorrent. They set insane, ever-escalating expectations and operated with the pervasive attitude that nothing you did was ever good enough. Metrics were weaponized, feedback was almost exclusively negative, and there was zero recognition, support, or empathy for the impossible position they put frontline staff in. The culture was toxic, punitive, and built for high turnover rather than employee retention or growth. In short, this role will crush your enthusiasm, mental health, and work-life balance faster than you can imagine. The combination of constant micromanagement, unrealistic customer demands, outdated phone-heavy processes, brutal seasonal hours, inadequate pay, and terrible leadership makes Buildium’s support organization unsustainable for both employees and the business itself. Save yourself the burnout and look elsewhere—there are far better opportunities in proptech and SaaS support. I left as soon as I could and have never looked back. RUN.

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