Run - Product Manager E Source Employee Review

2.0
29 Aug 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People in tranches are a bliss to work with.

Cons

Compensation: Salaries are below market rates by at least 30% across the board and are never adjusted for inflation. The web products team has seen significant turnover, with many employees leaving shortly after realizing the nature of the work. Those who remain often work over 45 hours per week. An engineering employee earns under $100K, despite being the only remaining SME in cloud and Kubernetes after the DevOps leader was fired for requesting a raise. Benefits: Healthcare choices and costs are unremarkable, and the 401K plan is average at best. Bonuses: The CTO ensures bonuses are minimal. Turnover: A significant number of senior managers working on the main account have left in the last six months. Security: The company's security was compromised again, prompting the CTO to finally agree to pay for a security validation service.

Explore other reviews about E Source

5.0
28 July 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- This company attracts extremely intelligent and dedicated employees - Employee development and well-being are top priorities - Pay is competitive for most locations - Many positions are remote allowing for good work-life balance - A mission of "building a sustainable future in partnership with utilities" resonates with my personal passion of sustainability

Cons

- If you're not passionate about making positive changes in the utility industry, this may not be the right company for you

2.0
3 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people who are directly involved with project work are smart and passionate. Project work is interesting and feels meaningful

Cons

C-suite leadership is hyper-focused on profits. I worry this will lead to higher turnover, lower work quality, and less happy clients over time. C-suite leadership also seems to make decisions in a vacuum without consulting the teams who are actually impacted by those decisions There is limited investment in employees and our professional growth. Clunky systems, unclear expectations, and poor communication between departments. Limited to no investment in culture, employee well-being, or team cohesion

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