Untappd Reviews

3.1

50% would recommend to a friend

(53 total reviews)
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Trace Smith

68% approve of CEO

46% positive business outlook

Untappd has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 53 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Untappd 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

53 reviews
2.0
21 Apr 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

My first experience with this organization was as a salesperson. The process is the same, except more of a methodical approach. If one wishes to acquire skills in sales, the Untappd Sales does offer a methodical approach. The technology stack was adequate for the company, and they were willing to invest in software to help it grow. (Wish I could say the same investment was put towards it's employees) The benefits have changed many times in my tenure there, but remain good.

Cons

The company is plagued by leadership issues. As you get on your beautiful vessel, a ship even, and begin to set sail on your career path, you notice that the captain has never handled such a vessel. Because of the poor leadership, there is no awareness of how to utilize the Untappd's great resources effectively. Thus, the lifeboats designated to support your team are just in the way. Leadership, direction, and overall skills at the company are lacking, resulting in a situation that reads as “the C-suite drives the ship while I row, and nobody tells me where I am going.” (But there will be notifications about not rowing hard enough) Enough with the boats... You can come to Untappd/Nextglass and keep your head down and perform your job with no aspirations and you’ll do fine. Unless you're invited on the leadership team, you may not find anyone willing to listen to your ideas. If you are part of the leadership team, your job would seem to be to create ideas out of thin air and then proclaim them as correct. Research? Customer Feedback? User Feedback?? Employee Feedback?? These are not tools Untappd Leadership utilizes. (Though they do ask for this feedback on occasion) Problems at Untappd go unnoticed(or unacknowledged). No one is qualified to "steer the ship back on course", so they celebrate whose "accomplishments" were the greatest, while the company drifts off course. Several times I have experienced a lack of integrity on the leadership's part. My teammates or I have been told one thing, and then we received something different. When it comes to my commission, my goals, sales pipeline, or my job role, that is when can no longer contribute to the company. The perceived integrity of leadership is what caused me to look for a different team to work for. Original CEO (Kurt Taylor) earned my respect. Current CEO (Trace Smith) has not.

1.0
13 Dec 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you need a job out of college and have no sales experience, this is a decent starting step. For Wilmington, it pays super well, and the benefits are great. Most of the people you work with are going to be your friends; they hire goodhearted people. Everyone besides the sales team seems genuinely happy to be there, which is great to see. Greg, the founder, is a warmhearted person and I wish he was around more.

Cons

The role of an SDR is supposed to be, at most, 1 year until you can advance up. There is almost zero chance of a promotion here. Even the 'promotions' are hollow. Being an Account Executive is better, and I can attest to that, but there is no true bump in pay or earning potential. Technically, there is uncapped commission, but the market is saturated to the point where if you hit goal one month, you should count your blessings. 'Hitting goal' is more of a unicorn-type of event as in individual. If you ask about other opportunities, watch out for your job security. The lack of transparency in terms of promotions, demotions, inbound lead distribution, and direction of the company is appalling. Depending on who your roommate is, who you are sleeping around with, and 'Yes Man' attitude, will determine your fate. I don't need to go into details, but management will understand this one. Management continues to dangle a carrot of new opportunities for the sales team, and has been doing so for years. For years, there was hope in the minds of my peers and myself, but I soon realized that a new role would never come. Instead of saying "By this date we'll have X done at Untappd, and the landscape of the sales team will look different" it would look much better if you said "We completely dropped the ball on the implementation of X. We know a lot of you had your sights set on X, but we got too cocky in relying on just our name alone." I've seen a lot of talented people move across the country for this company, only to find out they are as replaceable as a lug nut on a car tire. Instead of hiring externally, there have been so many good people that you could have looked at who would have been rockstars in the roles you created that were given to others. Every sales company is going to have issues with inbound lead distribution. They tried to make it as fair as possible over a year ago, and the people who were getting an exorbitant amount of domestic inbound leads saw their numbers drop dramatically. A co-worker of mine even pulled a year's worth of numbers that determined one manager was clearly being sexist, but nothing came of it. Then, even after the distribution became more fair, who you lived with (which by the way, well-run companies don't condone a direct manager living with his subordinate) played a factor as well. Speaking of roommates, it was clear that the current managers in charge were never to be questioned, or even considered to be inept at their role. One manager (roommate of the VP of Sales) was known around the office as the manager who "Didn't do anything." Case and point, the only items you'd see on his work calendar were "Haircut" and "Brainstorming." Attitude reflects leadership, and when there's blatant ignorance on a "Director's" calendar, it affects the people at the bottom. I want to point out, not all of the managers are looked at in this light, and Trace and Kurt are smart people who work hard to row the boat forward, however, they lack visibility into what is really going on. They have pillars of culture, which are a great start. But there's an asterisk at the bottom which reads "Manager's Discretion" ie "We can do whatever we want at the end of the day." There have been too many instances like this to count where management had disregarded the pillars they constructed a few years back, all for personal/professional gain. The majority of the sales team is not happy. They won't tell you that they are not, because that is how a lot of people have lost their jobs over the years. Don't question anything management does, because they are right, and you are wrong. The only time a manager has done something so horribly wrong they had to lose their job, they were granted the opportunity to slide into an executive role at a sister company in Wilmington. Now I ask management, of the hundreds of people who you've fired over the past 4-5 years, of all of the families you've jeopardized because of your greed, how many of them did you give an opportunity to save face, salary, and not even actually lose their job? That's nepotism at its finest, and it's a shame. You're quick to fire a bar manager who is learning telesales at a fast rate, but because a manager/director is your friend, you erase his 'corporate sins' and give him another cushy job? Classic Untappd. The lack of foresight is prevalent as well. For example, they implemented SalesForce earlier this year, and instead of hiring experienced SalesForce experts to come in and diagnose/fix issues, they had one of the managers learn the complex system, which ended up crippling their sales numbers for an entire quarter. There is a lack of foresight from month-long sales campaigns to company-wide CRM implementations, all because they have the outlook that they will just figure it out because of the name on the sign on the door. Wilmington is a small town, and there is a reason that Untappd has a bad reputation. Please look beyond the Inc 500 list. Take a walk on Front street for 30 minutes, and if you ask enough people, EVERYONE knows somebody who has been fired/had a bad experience at Untappd. That doesn't matter to management, since they will cash in on those stock options when they sell the company to a buyer who does not know what they are in for.

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Untappd Response
6y
Thank you for taking the time to provide this feedback. We are sorry to hear of your negative experience during your time with us. Integrity is integral to the fabric of our organization and we take matters of this nature extremely seriously. We make it a priority to adhere to our employee policies across all levels, and are swift to take action when they are compromised. We appreciate the time you've taken to provide this feedback, and we'd welcome the opportunity to speak directly in order to find resolution and address any existing internal issues that may require our attention. If you'd be open to connecting, please reach out to hr@untappd.com to set up a time to speak. Sincerely, Untappd Human Resources
2.0
17 Mar 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Good work life balance being a remote employee - Got to travel to beer fest and meetups - Was excited to work in beer tech industry - Founder (App) was passionate about the app users and its community - Great small team I worked with and was excited to work under the current VP of Product - Gained some good experience working on the app

Cons

- No room to move up or increase compensation. At first I thought compensation was good but as I was leaving found out I was being paid about 25% less the average designer. - Company doesn't have an understanding of design or its value. Designers were originally left off of org chart because they forgot about the 2 designers they had. - As a designer be ready to wear many hats. I was hired as a product designer but asked to do everything from branding, to marketing, social media, frontend dev and whatever else that came up. Had to do so much there was never really enough time or resources to produce meaningful and quality design work. - Was told design team would grow but never added another designer in the 2 years I was there beside backfilling a role after the first designer left. - New Engineering process they put in place basically pushed designers from their teams and never gave designers the time to put in quality user research or establish a design process. - Not much innovation in the products

Viewing 1 - 3 of 53 Reviews

Glassdoor has 56 Untappd reviews submitted anonymously by Untappd employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Untappd is right for you.