Horrible culture, dysfunctional leadership with no integrity - Anonymous Employee- Former Employee Dual Entry Employee Review

1.0
21 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people. Genuinely brilliant humans who deserved so much better than this

Cons

I don’t even know where to begin. The founders. Ohhh, the founders. Two men so deeply convinced of their own genius that they have apparently never once entertained the possibility that they might be wrong. Ever. In their lives. They walk into rooms with the energy of people who split the atom and the qualifications of people who failed chemistry twice. Every meeting felt like watching someone prompt ChatGPT “just got funding, what now?” and call it a strategy. Now let’s talk about the product. The allegedly AI-Native ERP. It’s barely a GL. Some days debits became credits, credits became debits, assets became liabilities and liabilities just… became equity. You could run a balance sheet and an AR aging report, same account, same company, same date, same period and get two completely different numbers. Which one is right? Nobody knows. The engineers don’t know, product doesn’t know. God doesn’t know. Just VIBES. I have never experienced a larger gap between external branding and internal reality in my entire career. The website and public narrative portray this polished “AI-native accounting platform revolutionizing finance.” The actual internal experience felt more like watching people duct-tape a collapsing group project together in real time while pretending everything was fine. Go read Benitago reviews. Same founders. Same playbook. Hire smart people, work them to the ground, lie to investors, lie to customers, lie to employees. Misrepresent everything. The only thing that changed is the industry. The reviews are shockingly consistent. Almost like a pattern. Almost like a choice.

Explore other reviews about Dual Entry

5.0
26 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

DualEntry is one of the more exciting environments I’ve worked in if you’re someone who likes building from the ground up. You’re working on a genuinely ambitious product in a category that feels like it could be transformed. Leadership thinks big and there is a lot of momentum around the company. There is a lot of ownership early. If you’re proactive and raise your hand, you’ll get exposure beyond your job description. I’ve been able to get involved in areas beyond just carrying a quota, including GTM discussions, process, messaging and helping think through how the sales machine scales. You learn quickly because there isn’t much hiding place. You’re close to founders, customers and important decisions. If you’re motivated by challenge and want to compress years of learning into months, there is a lot of opportunity.

Cons

As with most early-stage companies, there is naturally a lot of change happening in real time. Priorities evolve, processes mature and roles continue to take shape as the company learns and grows. Personally, I see that as part of the appeal and one of the reasons I joined. For someone looking for highly established playbooks and very defined structures from day one, it could feel like an adjustment. For people who enjoy building, ownership and figuring things out, it’s likely a positive rather than a negative.

1
1.0
26 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people I worked with and met along the way were one of the best parts of the experience. Not everyone, of course, but many of the operators and teammates were incredibly talented, hardworking, and great to collaborate with.

Cons

I’m glad more people are finally speaking openly about their experiences at this company. Having spent years in tech and ERP, I can confidently say this was one of the most concerning operating environments I’ve seen. Many of the overly positive reviews you see online do not reflect the reality that many employees experienced day to day. The biggest issue, in my opinion, starts at the top. The founders consistently demonstrated a lack of understanding of the complexity, responsibility, and trust required to operate in ERP and financial systems. This is not a lightweight industry. These are mission-critical platforms where customers are making massive operational and financial bets, and where careers can be impacted by failed implementations or broken promises. What troubled me most was how heavily the company leaned into marketing narratives and hype rather than operational readiness, product maturity, or customer success. In many cases, expectations were set far beyond what the platform or organization could realistically support. Internally, there was very little transparency, accountability, or leadership presence. Communication was inconsistent, priorities constantly shifted, and many employees were left trying to hold things together without meaningful direction or support. That said, there were still talented operators and hardworking people throughout the organization, and I genuinely enjoyed working with several of them. Unfortunately, strong employees alone cannot compensate for weak leadership and a lack of long-term vision. For anyone considering joining: do your diligence carefully, speak to former employees directly, and look beyond the branding and pitch decks.

7
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