Levvel Reviews

3.9

75% would recommend to a friend

(54 total reviews)

Chris Hart

80% approve of CEO

71% positive business outlook

Levvel has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 54 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Levvel employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

54 reviews
2.0
24 Nov 2018

Know what you're getting into

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1) You will drink a lot. For free. Seriously: beer in the office, happy hours almost every week, tequila tastings on Friday. It can be a lot of fun. 2) Depending on your project, you may get to know and work with some brilliant people. 3) Back to the first point, there is a lot of drinking, free CrossFit, and "team building" activities. If you're in your early 20's, or just graduated from college, this can turn into instant friends. In some ways it's similar to pledging a frat. No joke.

Cons

1) Pay will be lower here than what you can get elsewhere. 2) A lot of your coworkers will be drunk frequently both inside and outside the office. This includes Senior Leadership, Directors, VPs, etc. You will see people in leadership positions get drunk and do stupid things. Sometimes it will be funny, sometimes it will get the company sued. You may see them acting inappropriately around women. If you’re popular you’ll be invited to bars, casinos, concerts and more by popular people (everyone in Leadership is a popular person). You should go. 3)"Critical information" will disseminate in bars instead of formally. If you have a family or friends outside of work, expect to know less than the popular crowd. This can include: what clients are being pursued, what projects at going poorly, and who's about to get fired. 4) On the topic of firing, tons of people have been let go in the past 3 months. In one fell swoop our CEO resigned and ~13 people were fired without warning. Offices outside of our Charlotte headquarters were hit hardest. Employees weren't told who was let go and discovered who was terminated based on deactivated Slack accounts. Of course, people in the popular crowd knew weeks before. If you go to bars, you'll learn things. If you don't, you'll be left behind. 4.a) Outside of the mass firing, a disturbingly high number of people have been let go recently. If a client chooses to stop buying Levvel someone ends up taking the fall. On the other hand, I've personally seen an employee who didn’t get along with his manager get fired even though the client liked him. Popularity will keep you safe from the chopping block, competence will not. Go to bars. 5) None of the managers have managed people before. That sounds like a joke, but it isn't. Levvel took a handful of software developers, held weekly meetings with them where they talked about leadership, made them read a book or two and appointed them managers. They handle pay, titles, hiring and firing etc. They have virtually no adult supervision. If there is any truth to Levvel being a cult, then our newly minted managers are gulping the FlavorAid. Expect to hear a mixture of insanity and incompetence whenever you speak with one. If you need to know what's really going on, ignore meetings with your manager and go to bars. 6) We're not profitable. 6.a) We've been burning through a lot of investor money working on unprofitable contracts and going to bars on the company dime. There's a tinge of desperation now; it's been there since the CEO change. We announce and get excited for clients we haven't landed yet. I'm worried for what will happen if we don't land one of the major leads we're already celebrating, I think more "firings" (lay-offs?) may result. 6.b) Do to pressures to become profitable you'll hear and see things that seem unethical. This can include being asked to tell a client that you're a Sr Java developer despite having never worked in Java or any other back-end technology. Or it could mean hearing that your coworker is simultaneously working on projects for two different clients at once and billing 40 hours a week for both. 7) It is possible that you'll be put on a long running project that requires you to be in a client site for well over a year. You may find yourself doing staff-aug QA work despite being a developer. You'll be asked, point blank, to work insane hours doing manual QA so that an arbitrary client deadline gets hit. You may be the only Levvel employee around. You'll have a Levvel manager who you'll only see on a 20 minute video call every 2-3 weeks. You'll have a separate client manager (remember you're staff aug and the client will need to manage you). Don't be surprised if the to separate chains of command you report to don't see eye to eye, or if they're openly hostile to one another. Your skills will atrophy. You will get no respect from the client or from Levvel.

avatar
Levvel Response
7y
We take every review seriously and investigate any credible claims involving areas of unethical, illegal or fraudulent behavior. We’ve found nothing to support or substantiate those accusations. It’s worth noting that we have provided and continue to provide a number of anonymous and attributable mechanisms to provide this kind of feedback internally and have not received any indications of this, either. With respect to the other issues raised here, we are disappointed to hear this individual is so unhappy and wish we had an opportunity to hear this feedback through internal channels where we could more directly address it. That said, we take concerns about workplace behavior, excessive drinking, and support from management seriously. We have not seen evidence of problems of the severity or pervasiveness described here. When we see individual cases of problems of this nature, we do take swift action.
2.0
27 Nov 2018

Built for senior leadership, not for you.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some great people work at Levvel. Some of the projects are really interesting. Opportunity to grow in your career under some very knowledgeable developers.

Cons

I was very-pro Levvel when I started, but, I can honestly say I wouldn’t recommend the company to friends anymore. The challenge, as I see it, is a misalignment of interests that is built into the culture of the company. Levvel is a venture-backed company that doesn't provide equity to all its employees. This leads to horribly misaligned interests as senior leadership is building something that they own and that frontline employees have no stake in. This can lead to 2 classes of employees (owners and non-owners) and to decisions that have a positive impact on the company (and owners) but a negative impact on employees. If the company has an exit, senior leadership gets a payday, and you get nothing but a new corporate boss. Leadership will justify any negative decisions as "investing" in the company. This is valid if you're an owner. If you are not then it is simply the company improving itself at your expense. Never work for a venture-backed company that doesn't provide you with equity.

1.0
7 Apr 2019

Cannot keep employees

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Cool office, cool people, cool view

Cons

Levvel is owned by investors, and they want money. Levvel laid off the CEO and other top-level / mid / low employees a few months ago. Leaders said that layoffs were done and the rest of the employees would be safe. Fast-forward a few weeks, and another round of layoffs were issued. We've learned that we have no job security at Levvel anymore. Now, a lot of us are leaving for Slalom and other local companies. I know a handful of people actively trying to find another job, so they're not next.

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Glassdoor has 58 Levvel reviews submitted anonymously by Levvel employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Levvel is right for you.