Competence Is Optional. Compliance Is Not. - Senior Engineer In Time Tec Employee Review

1.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Access to a handful of genuinely skilled technologists willing to share their expertise made certain stretches of this role worthwhile. If you are fortunate enough to land near one of them, absorb everything you can.

Cons

Where to begin. Leadership here is less a meritocracy than a recruitment campaign. The organization has an aggressive, almost evangelical drive to push individuals, regardless of qualification, into management roles. Declining is treated not as a professional decision, but as a loyalty test you have morally failed. The pipeline and pressure exists to grow the pyramid of leadership, and not to serve the people within it. From the point at which one declines a “leadership” position, you will be treated noticeably worse. It’s just bullying with extra steps. It should surprise no one that the most senior positions are occupied by individuals with a particular advantage over their peers: proximity to the CEO at the dinner table. Whether this reflects a deliberate strategy or simply the natural entropy of an unchecked founder, the effect on organizational credibility is the same. Speaking of the CEO, employees are periodically conscripted into the audience of what can only be described as an in-house personal development brand. Attendance at these sessions is framed as a mandatory opportunity. Though, it is not so much an opportunity as it is mandatory. On the subject of professionalism and communication standards: expectations are applied with remarkable inconsistency across the organization. High standards are selectively enforced, and the disparity is visible enough that it does not go unnoticed by those who actually meet them. Finally, and this warrants documentation, my separation from this company was recorded in a manner that directly contradicts the terms under which I resigned. I fulfilled my notice period in full. The paperwork tells a different story. I would encourage anyone considering this employer to keep meticulous records of every “professional” exchange, beginning on day one. I have additional points of feedforward. However, I’ve concluded this organization has not earned them. Frankly, I doubt they’d even be heard out, land properly, or acted upon.

Explore other reviews about In Time Tec

5.0
1 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I appreciate and am genuinely grateful to be a part of a company like In Time Tec. Just like any business, it navigates changes in the industry, economy, and the overall ebb and flow of business - but I've seen leadership navigate changes with long lead times and full transparency which I deeply respect. I've witnessed leadership sharing financials transparently, saying what it is, and making decisions as needed with people in mind - beyond what is required or expected in standard business practices.

Cons

There isn't anything that truly doesn't work for me. If there was, I'm confident I could have an open conversation with management and that we'd sort through it.

2.0
21 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The best part of working here was the people at the peer level. I worked with a lot of supportive and capable colleagues. There were some perks like unlimited PTO, an on-site gym, and occasional team lunches, though those are fairly standard. A few managers did care about employee growth and tried to support their teams. I am giving an extra star on my overall rating solely based on the enjoyment I had working with my team and the connections I made outside of leadership.

Cons

Where to begin... There were several challenges that ultimately outweighed the positives. Leadership was inconsistent and often said one thing but did another. The company initially pushed remote and hybrid work, then quickly reversed course and required everyone to be onsite. That shift felt misleading. Compensation and benefits were also concerns. Starting salaries were below market for the region and industry, and while employee stock benefits were frequently discussed during Fire Side Chats, they were never actually offered. Questions about compensation or equity during company-wide meetings were often avoided or dismissed with the CEO literally telling anyone who asked to "Go start your own company." The culture at the top felt very cult-like. If you didn’t fully agree with leadership or “buy in,” you were seen as not being part of the tribe. That dynamic made it difficult to voice concerns or push for change. Performance reviews were another frustration. Expectations were extremely high, but it was very difficult to receive strong ratings regardless of workload or impact. There was a constant push to do more, with little recognition or compensation to match. The biggest issue was credibility around job security. Leadership repeatedly used “no layoffs” as a selling point to justify lower salaries and to attract and retain employees. Despite that, they went through multiple rounds of layoffs at the first sign of trouble and may continue to do so. That completely undermined trust in leadership.

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In Time Tec Response
1mo
Thank you for taking the time to share this detailed feedback about your experience at In Time Tec. We are please to know that your colleagues were a source of joy and that they aided in your experience at ITT. Your comments about inconsistencies in leadership practices, review cycles, pay, and work–life boundaries describe a workplace that did not meet your expectations. We will continue to review our leadership and development approaches for current and future employees.
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