Good work, dangerous culture: opiniones de empleados con el puesto de Empleado anónimo en Reverb

2,0
25 ene 2019
Empleado anónimo
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Aprobación del CEO
Perspectiva de la empresa

Ventajas

Many interesting problems to solve. The company works at a face pace. There is an emphasis on trying something and learning from it. Peers enjoy working with each other and often make it fun. All teams try hard to improve the lives of Reverb's users. Work/life balance is healthy. You pull late hours here and there for a big effort or if there's an issue, but the company understands that families and lives come first. No chasing of VC money just to chase it. You will be challenged, learn, and grow.

Desventajas

Reverb has been built on a foundation of abuse. When you interact up the org chart, there is a good chance you will be yelled at, swore at, disrespected in public, or criticized without being listened to. Those that don't mind this culture thrive. Those who do leave. Opinions outside leadership are not valued. In public, they say they want to hear the best ideas. But what matters is what they say. If there was a clear vision for the company, it'd be less concerning. There is an imbalance in how tech workers are treated vs non-tech. Engineers and designers get conference budgets and are protected from routine work. Not unique to Reverb among tech companies, but worth knowing. The pros must be balanced with an experience that, if you aren't on leadership or tech, can devalue you as a person.

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Respuesta de Reverb
5y
We would like to provide an update on two fronts in response to your feedback. In January 2020, Reverb welcomed David Mandelbrot as our new CEO, which was soon after our new CTO, CMO and CFO started. Our leadership team is committed to our internal values, which we recently developed in collaboration with employees in different areas of the company. Those values are: working in harmony, owning our performance, embracing creativity, learning and teaching, and leading with enthusiasm. We’re confident that our leadership team is setting an excellent tone of support and professionalism, which is reflected throughout our organization.

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5,0
19 mar 2026
Empleado anónimo
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Aprobación del CEO
Perspectiva de la empresa

Ventajas

Wonderful community of like minded people

Desventajas

3rd CEO in 6 years. Unstable executive leadership

2,0
30 nov 2025
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Aprobación del CEO
Perspectiva de la empresa

Ventajas

Reverb once attracted a lot of smart, politically progressive people across departments. Engineering is technically opinionated in the right ways and consistently chooses the most reliable, secure tools for the job. The codebase does have some tech debt, but even large refactors are easy to manage. Work/life balance is good depending on what department/team you're on.

Desventajas

If you're a person of a marginalized gender or race, you may notice the product and engineering department isn’t an equitable environment. While there’s lukewarm emphasis on inclusivity, microaggressions are common and the company’s performative progressivism rarely translates into meaningful impact. The dominant culture at Reverb prioritizes sameness. Those in managing roles struggle to support those who don’t immediately hit the ground running at the same pace as those who’ve historically been overrepresented in tech and benefit from implicit biases. They often seem unequipped to support the growth of direct reports who don’t mirror their own identities, hobbies, or working styles. Rather than offering structured support, “underperformers” are usually managed out. Employees who don’t align with unspoken norms are often deemed a “poor culture fit.” PIPs are never used, so expect sudden termination. Even with a documented career framework to reference, feedback and career conversations can be inconsistent, subjective, or missing entirely. Advocating for yourself often leads nowhere once your manager has made up their mind about you. This stalls career growth and creates real institutional barriers to advancement which disproportionately impacts employees of marginalized identities. Following the first round of layoffs, those who were using FMLA for medical or mental health reasons (many of whom identified as queer and/or gender non-conforming) were let go. Some who returned from FMLA before the re-org were often treated with skepticism, and passive-aggressive remarks about their technical competencies weren’t uncommon. Taking extended leave (unless it’s for paternity leave) is frowned upon even though employees are well within their right to do so. Empathy and common sense are lacking, and those who embody those qualities don’t tend to stay long. Despite clear attrition of diverse talent, leadership hasn’t acknowledged this as a serious issue. They have the data to support this but refuse to share it when asked. The review from Jan 8, 2024 also seems more like damage control than an authentic recount of events. It reads as if it were written by someone in leadership (I still chuckle at the “very qualified, competent leadership team” line) due to the wording. This kind of tone-deaf messaging reflects the broader leadership culture: resistant to accountability and dismissive of feedback. They’re consistently insulated as a protected class from the impact of their own poor decisions and behavior. HR doesn’t seem to notice a pattern with certain managers where women and people of color consistently flee from their teams or show signs of burnout. After two rounds of layoffs within 13 months, any DEI momentum was abandoned. Similarly, new executives hired would contribute to continual company vision adjustments because they, too, felt the need to hit the ground running. When this happens at that level, though, it points to a lack of clear vision as a company and adds a sense of confusion for the rest of the teams. Bottom line: Reverb has been unstable since its inception. I’ve heard horror stories about pre-Etsy but there hasn’t been much improvement since the acquisition besides not being berated in front of your colleagues by the founder anymore. From what I’ve been able to glean from current employees, post-Etsy seems just as bleak if not more. Morale is constantly in the gutter, but it’s always suggested that you put on a smile and ignore the flames around you for fear of losing your job. If you choose to work here, document everything. Reverb has been hurdling towards litigation for years and it’s a wonder they haven’t (to my knowledge) been hit yet. Seek external support if you feel you’re being treated unfairly. At the end of the day, an unclear and inconsistent approach to DEI negatively impacts all employees. Unfortunately, this isn’t unique in tech, but that doesn’t make it excusable.

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