Wouldn't recommend - Anonymous employee Sensor Tower Employee Review

2.0
28 Jan 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The pay is decent when you join but don't expect any improvements after that

Cons

Data.ai acquisition was one of the biggest failures in terms of employee retainment. It was basically a cash grab/exit opp for the mgt in data.ai and that allowed ST to control the market. Market had no choice but to go for the inferior product of ST at the price of data.ai and that got to the heads of the ST Management. There was nothing really done to facilitate a smooth transition for employees. Half of the data.ai team were let go and then the rest eventually left or were let go. Product teams even after many months couldn't even get half the features available on data.ai. They pretty much call poor decision making as "Start up culture". The only way to get visibility is to be a 'yes man' to the CRO. CEO is hardly seen. If you are in their favorites, then its great and you can move to the top easily even if you don't have the experience, skill or qualifications.

Explore other reviews about Sensor Tower

5.0
20 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great culture, realistic KPI's, overall ideal place to start in the tech sales industry

Cons

Not applicable here at the moment

1.0
17 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The technical challenges are interesting. You will have the opportunity to work on complex problems alongside some very talented people.

Cons

The primary source of toxicity is the CEO, who maintains control through public humiliation and aggressive "dressing downs." No one is safe from these outbursts, but he is particularly hostile toward women, frequently subjecting them to openly dismissive treatment that would be unacceptable in any professional setting. He uses technical meetings and public forums to belittle individuals, shouting down anyone who offers a different perspective or attempts to uphold professional standards. It is a culture of intimidation where "leadership" is synonymous with bullying. Because the CEO is so volatile, the management layer has devolved into a collection of "minions" focused entirely on survival and internal politics. There is no psychological safety, which has created a climate of surveillance where backstabbing is the primary way to gain "pull." Managers are more interested in disparaging their colleagues to stay in the CEO's good graces than they are in shipping quality products or supporting their teams.

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