Scoutible Reviews

3.6

56% would recommend to a friend

(5 total reviews)

56% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

5 reviews
1.0
20 May 2018

Seems CEO addressed the wrong Person?

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Tyler, Dan, Shawn, Brandon Tyler, in particular, is the glue that keeps the company together. He is personable, sincere, thoughtful and as great at his job is he is allowed to be (think he has more to offer on that front in the right environment). Dan simply put is a quiet genius Shawn and Brandon are a great complement to one another as The Data Science Team. Shawn questions everything as should be the case when dealing with the science and psychology. Brandon is introspective, quietly consuming a lot of conversations and content to call on his experience in delivering very pointed work efforts

Cons

First, I will say I had no intention of writing a review but one of the current team told me the CEO had attacked me here on a review (which I hadnt even written). Also, the CEOs suggestion that the negative reviews are tied to one person is erroneous at best as Glassdoor monitors for 1 review per person so it might be good to accept what people say and learn from them vs attacking? I say all of this with no animosity but rather as someone with a hugely successful career helping start-ups, I hope the CEO can grow and learn and grow in her own career before it is too late. Micromanagement is not a positive attribute...Having a belief that you know more about everything than the people hired to do the jobs is not a formula for success Spending on the business....Investing in the business as your investors would expect is going to yield greater results. Committing to things and then doing them/ Creating what the market needs in order to buy.....Taking the easy way or deferring decisions that save money adds work on the team, minimizes the value of the outputs or keeps necessary things from happening at all. Rigidity actually decreases productivity and moral- Expecting minimally 9 to 6:30+ work days with people feeling bad if they leave early is not a way to build a positive culture. Sensitivity to others is important---eg. Not everyone lives 2 blocks from the office and have other things they want to do with their free time so maybe let the team decide things such as when to have a happy hour and you adjust to them? There is so much skill in the small team at Scoutible that is just not allowed to come out in the setting established.

4.0
8 Nov 2017

Incredible!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working in a fast-growing startup and reaching your full potential

Cons

Honestly, can't think of any

2.0
28 Jan 2020

Lipstick on a Pig

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

By virtue of working with a small team, I was able to get extremely rewarding, hands-on experience with little to no red tape (unlike the big corporations I’ve worked at).

Cons

Since more than half the team (minus the co-founders) has voluntarily left recently, I thought it appropriate to write an honest review for anyone looking to join Scoutible. Keeping things high-level, the main problem areas are in the product itself and the management. To protect Scoutible’s privacy, I will limit my critique on the product. I believe every step in the product’s lifespan has reflected leadership’s mindset of prioritizing razzle/dazzle over practicality and/or product-market fit. Further worsening things is leadership’s insistence on routine strategy changes and a dismissal of objections by the team instead of tackling underlying issues. Management-related points: 1. As I alluded to earlier, Scoutible’s CEO does not like to be challenged - a problematic trait for the leader of a small organization. The CEO has previously scapegoated employees and routinely demoralizes team members for being critical (there is a distinction between expressing your concerns with valid alternatives and not being “aligned” with a vision). Instead of addressing team members’ critiques on strategy, she has dismissed them as being too negative or “cancerous”. And while it is one thing to gather a breadth of opinions from external parties, it is altogether another to selectively listen to people who agree with you without an accurate or holistic view of the business from the inside. The CEO has routinely soaked in and prioritized advice from people who have validated her opinions, people who have little to no insight into the truth under the hood, while sidelining team members’ opinions and research. 2. One of the most acute problems is that the CEO doesn’t trust the team. A former Scoutible colleague advised her that she needed to trust the team to do their best and allow for more flexible work options (e.g. work from home) to help with low morale, despite great work output. She refused by saying that giving people leeway and flexibility would lead to a loss in momentum. As you can imagine, this leads to a “butts in seats” mentality (as the other review pointed out, a strange hardset 9-6:30 minimum rule) and again, disgruntled employees who feel nervous to even take the time to go see the doctor/attend to personal issues. 3. A widely agreed upon opinion is that the CEO is inauthentic and lacks an alarming amount of empathy that is necessary for a good leader and a well-functioning team. When employees have had car accidents, family emergencies, etc., the CEO’s response has been to understand how that would affect their work hours first and foremost. As an example, while the CEO was on vacation, an employee went to the ER for an acute medical emergency. The CEO’s response was to question the meetings that employee would be missing the next day and asked her to come into the office instead of immediately seeking medical treatment.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 5 Reviews

Glassdoor has 15 Scoutible reviews submitted anonymously by Scoutible employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Scoutible is right for you.