A great company with a huge HR problem. - Procurement ProcureAbility Employee Review

1.0
29 Jan 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

100% remote work company for all employees. A great deal of Procurement expertise in organization.

Cons

There are no HR employees at this company which exposes the company to employment law violations. There is one person that handles HR, the Chief Talent Officer, and they have no clue what they are doing. Use extreme caution when applying to this company, but especially if you live in California or are applying for an HR role. They pay the same amount regardless of the employee location. If you live in the Bay Area, you will be offered 60k for a position that requires a degree and 3-5 years experience. If you get a sign-on bonus and end up leaving they will try to withhold the bonus amount from your last paycheck. California has a lot of laws that are favorable to employees. The Chief Talent Officer, again the only HR person in the company, thinks their “policies” out-rule actual laws.

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ProcureAbility Response
3y
We certainly appreciate this forum which allows people to share their perspectives. We do in fact have a legal firm review all of our policies, documents and practices, including terminations for performance, to ensure we are in compliance with all federal and state laws.

Explore other reviews about ProcureAbility

5.0
24 June 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote-first company with great work/life balance. The people here are genuinely nice and great to work with; it feels like people are always being promoted. If you're looking for a place where you can grow your career and still be present with your family, this is it.

Cons

It's a small firm, so there's nowhere to hide and standards are high. Given the nature of the work, it's easy to be siloed into just your department or project.

1
2.0
4 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Salary No Utilization Small Firm feel

Cons

Internal Politics Low opportunity for promotion required activity HR is heavily involved in performance/promotion discussion when they have no line of sight to the work conducted by the resporces. Becomes a game of favorites at some point. Leadership hands out firm building roles to people they like ...which is a requirement to get promoted so bacically its favoritism. IF you are Big4 STAY AWAY Managers are full of people who have no idea what they are doing. Junior resources like analysts are terrible with tactical work and data If you want to destroy your career trajectory, join this firm.

3
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