Remote work and decent pay, but culture has eroded - Senior Software Engineer Optro Employee Review

2.0
26 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Remote work - Decent pay for engineers - $200 monthly stipend - Friendly colleagues

Cons

This company is completely different from when I started working for them. What used to be a very trusting and empowering environment has become entirely eroded in the last year and a half. I was hired into a culture where if you see something that can be fixed or improved then just do it. That's all gone. Everyone is now siloed, every task effectively requires someone's permission, and work is micromanaged. Leadership is becoming obsessed with measuring productivity through vanity metrics that end up creating perverse incentives that even middle management is taking advantage of. There have been multiple reorgs in this time, and many of the top performers who made this team what it was have left. This has lead to churn, mixed messages, and a feeling like you don't even know the company you're working for anymore. Optro no longer seems to have any sort of internal identity. Leadership has recently been shown to be aloof as they repeat PR terms and act dismissive towards employees who question them. Lastly, good luck advancing your career unless you are someone's favorite or if you're fine working with tech that's almost entirely irrelevant everywhere else.

Explore other reviews about Optro

5.0
4 June 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Transparent leadership, very supportive growth environment and work culture

Cons

Competing priorities and lack of cross-team communication

1.0
20 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote Work (I honestly couldn't imagine working so closely in an office with some of these people)

Cons

I joined Optro expecting a collaborative, team-oriented support environment, but the reality was deeply disappointing. From the moment I started, the red flags were apparent. The culture lacks accountability at nearly every level. Rather than operating as a cohesive support team, the environment feels heavily driven by politics, favoritism, and performative loyalty instead of professionalism and partnership. Collaboration is minimal, and there is very little ownership when problems arise. One of the biggest operational challenges is how outdated many of the business tools and processes are. Instead of modernizing workflows or empowering employees to improve systems, the organization seems stuck operating under habits and structures established during prior leadership. Unfortunately, there appears to be little willingness from leadership or teams to challenge inefficient ways of working or evolve the culture. The micromanagement is also extreme. Employees are not trusted to do the jobs they were hired to do, which creates an environment of constant oversight rather than empowerment. In healthy organizations, leaders hire capable professionals and allow them to execute. Here, the lack of trust is felt daily and impacts morale significantly. What was most disappointing is that none of this was transparent during the interview process. The gap between what was presented and the actual working environment was substantial. If you thrive in environments built on autonomy, collaboration, accountability, innovation, and mutual respect, this may not be the right fit.

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