Pros
Competitive compensation, excellent health benefits, fully remote work, and the opportunity to work alongside smart, passionate people. If you’re excited by crypto and thrive in fast-moving environments, there’s plenty of interesting work to do.
Cons
The best word I can use to describe the experience is chaotic. This isn’t the healthy ambiguity that comes with a fast-growing company. Priorities shift frequently, reorgs are common, and it can be difficult to know which initiatives will remain priorities from one moment to the next.
Communication often feels reactive rather than strategic. Employees regularly receive lengthy Slack posts from leadership at all hours, including nights and weekends, and major changes can happen with little context. Over time, this makes it difficult to feel confident in the company’s direction or build trust in leadership.
Prospective employees should also know that Kraken has a workplace culture unlike most tech companies. Leadership takes a very broad approach to free expression, and political/cultural debates are common in public Slack channels with intentionally limited moderation. Some people will appreciate that environment, while others may find it distracting or uncomfortable.
Job security can also feel uncertain. Reorgs and layoffs are recurring realities, and the process is handled by disabling employee access before notifying those affected. Regardless of the business rationale, it leaves employees feeling like they’re disposable rather than valued.
There are genuinely talented people throughout the company, but the constant shifts in direction, lack of organizational stability, and erosion of employee trust make it difficult to recommend as a long-term place to build a career. If you thrive in constant change and don’t mind uncertainty, this may be a good fit. If you’re looking for strategic consistency, stability, and thoughtful leadership through change, I would look elsewhere.