After my first year at Crossover - Manager Crossover for Work Employee Review

5.0
12 Oct 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- I have to tell there's a huge difference in quality of people working for this company comparing to my previous journeys. - Never had problem with my payments it's like a clock every week. - Learned a lot from my direct supervisors, now regretting I could be 4x more successful if I could apply these working / productivity methods with my previous startups. - Managing my own time is outstanding. I'm free to do whetever I want, whenever I want to. Nobody is baby-sitting in Crossover, all you have to do is to contribute in your company 40 hours a week, nobody cares when you did it. - Their tracking platform (Worksmart) told me a lot about myself. I was consuming unnecessarily too much social media and news before, now I'm more focused.

Cons

- Having physical work friends is amazing, you won't have it in Crossover since you'll have a team of international talent. This may be distractive too.

avatar
Crossover for Work Response
9y
Thanks for the review and glad to know you like the remote model. The WorkSmart is indeed an awesome resource to gain insights about yourself, so it's great that you use to its full extent. Also thank you for your suggestion about internal communication - we'll do our best to do a better job there.

Explore other reviews about Crossover for Work

5.0
24 July 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work ability was nice!

Cons

Some shifts were rigid for emoloyees

avatar
Crossover for Work Response
10mo
Hey, thanks for the stellar review!
2.0
30 July 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Crossover does require work from home. For many, this is a good thing and, for me, helped productivity. The salary is good, but depending upon your country's tax situation it might not be as good as it seems on the surface.

Cons

Where do I start? I tried to be objective with my 2-star rating; Crossover isn't unethical or stealing from their employees or anything like that. However, for a seasoned professional, be warned... I joined in one of the Very High Dollar executive-level positions being driven by their desire to acquire 50+ companies in the near term. I'm in the US. As such (and I knew this going in), the tax consequences for being a contractor are non-trivial. There's also the consideration that you must fund any perks yourself - healthcare, retirement, etc. While the salary is generous enough to do that, it's not as shiny as it seems on the surface. Your mileage may vary depending upon your home country. What I really disliked: Constant tracking/ justification of work stream. Seriously. As others have pointed out, it's difficult to actually *get* credit for a full work week without working extra. Especially in some of the higher-level, more 'creative' positions such as architect, product management, etc. there's minimal or no opportunity to review or think over things. For me, I work in bursts followed by small distractions in which I'm running the problems in the background of my thoughts. A variety of coworkers and management in my history have almost universally commented about the volume of good work I produce. Even my peers at Crossover had no problem with the quantity or quality of my production. However, their tracking software and systems simply don't credit anything other than linear, constant "work". This was bad for me, resulting in me working extra, reworking things as I attempting to change my processes, "faking" it, or simply working longer to attempt to make my hours. I also felt bad for some of the more junior or "factory" positions. It really is tracked by the minute, with lots of incentive to find "problems" with productivity. This is really a thinly-veiled method of wringing blood out of a turnip, by finding flaws or gaps and essentially docking pay. Yeah, the salaries are good but the amount of ancillary work that goes into making "real" hours is awful, and I felt like a chump contributing to it. I had to quit for my sanity.

1585
avatar
Crossover for Work Response
7y
We appreciate your review. Our wages are paid in USD, so it's not going to be as competitive in high tech markets like San Francisco or Boston in the United States where software development is ultra-competitive. However, wages for the same jobs are very competitive in other US cities and outside the US. Sometimes these wages can be 5-6x the local average. Our business model is unique and isn't for everyone. We aren't trying to be like everyone else. The future of work is being redefined. We pride ourselves in being a pioneer in this new paradigm. If you want to know more about this work model, you can read about it here: https://medium.com/@crossoverforwork/the-factory-model-enabling-massive-scale-across-business-functions-98b18ad574f8
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