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Paradox Reviews

4.2

77% would recommend to a friend

(90 total reviews)

Aaron Matos

75% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

Paradox has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 90 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Paradox 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

90 reviews
1.0
20 Jan 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great product and a lot of great people once worked here.

Cons

Many! Cult like atmosphere that’s reinforced with a cult like leadership training. People in leadership that are put into positions based on loyalty and not ability. Some in leadership have only ever worked for this CEO their entire professional careers and have no versatility. A murky and secretive road map of where the company is going. Only the CEO can make even the tiniest decisions. Extreme pay discrepancies between employees performing the same tasks. Hiring is obviously done based on looks. This is especially true for inexperienced nice looking interns who somehow find themselves rubbing elbows the CEO in a short amount of time. There is a joke around the office that the CEO clearly has a “type”. Environment is toxic and immature. Promotions here are based on likability which comes from the cult leadership deciding if they like you enough to talk you up to the CEO. Any career move or raise is only approved via a private meeting with the CEO. Everyone dreads these meeting and some leave in tears.

2.0
27 Feb 2023

Great product, poor leadership

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Good pay -Great teammates -Good product

Cons

Absolutely terrible leadership. The CEO is an arrogant jerk, and the senior leadership is mostly made up folks he's worked with for many years, which forms this weird clique where nothing will ever change for the better. I was optimistic when they started hiring other senior leaders from other major tech companies (theres some great talent at this company), but I was discouraged to see exactly what I feared would happen, happen. The "old guard" leadership continued to do things their way without giving one single shred of thought to any one elses opinion, and they began alienating the new extremely talented senior level employees they just hired. There is a constant struggle between this old guard/new guard, and it lends to a very tumultuous environment. Leadership touts culture as one of their most important core values, and you'll hear everyone at the top parrot the phrase "we're a culture company", however, like so many other companies, this is all talk and no follow through. There is no "culture" to speak of, except that of toxic leadership. It's a shame, because Paradox really does have great technology, and I think there is a lot of potential for the company. I would have loved to stay here if leadership didn't make every day truly miserable. Lastly, expect to be VASTLY over worked. It starts in onboarding and never lets up. The onboarding experience at Paradox was the most aggressive onboarding I've ever experienced. It was two weeks straight of 12+ hours a day of work. You were in back to back Onboarding sessions all day during business hours, and then had 4-6 hours of homework to complete each night. I remember thinking to myself, "if this is what they expect during onboarding, I'm worried for what they'll expect after we're done ramping." Well, that was exactly correct. If you're good at your role, you will have no work/life balance. The better you do, the more they'll pile on to you. And it's an issue from the top down.. Everyone from VP's to new employees are working ragged. Most of the leadership works 100 hours a week, and they'll expect you to do the same. I'm all for the "startup mentality" of grinding and building, but for a company that barely issues stock to new employees, this kind of expectation is insane. There is a very real attrition problem, and unless they can get a handle on that and make some serious changes at the highest levels of leadership, I fear this company will never reach its real potential. Oh, also, they require you to sign a fairly draconian non-compete agreement, and they do not appear to be shy about enforcing it. So beware of that when you're looking over your employment documentation.

1.0
10 June 2020

Don't do it

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The office is literally the only pro. I walked in so impressed because of this deceivingly pretty office.

Cons

This was my first job out of college and I would call my dad after work sometimes telling him about my day and he would be enamored about these peoples inability to manage. It was like being back in high school. Incredibly dramatic and wildly unorganized and unfair (yes, I know life is not fair. This place was NUTS... they wouldn't even pay us the correct amount sometimes and would say that our "comp plan changed" after someone closed a large deal so that they didn't have to pay us!!). The CEO has made a name for himself in the valley (and not a good one). I remember reading the Recruiting.com and Jobing.com glassdoor reviews (his previous companies) at work one day and was in shock at how accurate they were. We all were. I quit shortly after. If you are willing to constantly kiss up to and even flirt with Aaron, you will put yourself in a good position at Paradox. If not, don't do it. I moved to an 800 person company with offices around the globe and I've seen our CEO in person more times than I saw Aaron during my time there (7 or 8 months).

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Glassdoor has 97 Paradox reviews submitted anonymously by Paradox employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Paradox is right for you.