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Alert Innovation

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Alert Innovation reviews

3.6

46% would recommend to a friend

(109 total reviews)
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Fritz Morgan

47% approve of CEO

41% positive business outlook

Alert Innovation has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 109 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Alert Innovation 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

109 reviews
1.0
Jan 12, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent benefits, although I've had much better. They're working with some cool tech, it just doesn't work very often.

Cons

The most common reason an employee leaves a position is the relationship they have with their manager. That was true for me as well at Alert Innovation. While a nice person, she is very ambitious, perhaps too much so. One of the most common mistakes I’ve seen managers make is to manage up (worry about the bosses above) rather than manage down (worry about the workers, keep them happy). I was working lots of extra hours, and I told her so, and yet she kept pushing me to get things done sooner. A good manager, if they know their people are already working hard, will let the person know about the pressure above without pushing even more on the worker who’s already tired and stressed. One had only to look around Alert to see the effects of pushing software too soon, and cutting corners. There was bad software all over the place. Yet still she pushed. Quite a few times she upset me so much I almost quit. I stuck it out as long as I could; the final straw came when she implied she couldn’t trust me to work as diligently at home as I would in the office. There were so many nights when my name had the only green dot in Slack, she should have had NO doubts about my work ethic. But there were a lot of other issues, too. As I referenced above, the software being produced was buggy, to the point that from run to run it wouldn’t behave the same way twice very often. It often failed in different ways, making it really hard to figure out where the problem was. On top of that, there were a number of times it just fell over and died, without even coming all the way up first. In the time I was there, I never saw them hit a deadline. I became convinced that they were unlikely to hit deadlines in the future as well, which became another reason I left. The infrastructure, the most basic functions of a high tech company, got worse during my tenure. Things were constantly breaking, and it got worse while I was there. The last week the VPN was dropping me after I’d connected for 60 seconds. Every. Single. Time. I notified OPS, and didn’t hear back before I left. I heard and saw the best people leaving. Around the time that I left, it seemed to be accelerating. I saw mismanagement at all levels. I saw the high level managers of software in meetings they should not have been in (reviewing code not even in the actual product!). They loved meetings there, it felt at times like I was the only person who was really trying to get something accomplished. The final item which convinced me to leave was the leadership at Alert, or lack thereof. In the fall of 2021 they mandated that everyone be in the office for 3 days a week, and the SAME 3 days. It was a move of desperation, they simply hoped that having people in the office together would help us hit deadlines (hoping for random synergy and conversations). I saw no evidence that it helped, as I said things got worse the longer I was there. But I know it hurt in many ways. First, people were getting sick left and right, doesn’t matter if it was COVID or some cold, it still hurts productivity. Second, I was told in the exit interview that quite a few folks named the mandate as one of the reasons they were leaving. And third, it really hurt the pool of candidates that we could get to interview; the best people didn’t even want to interview there. For myself, I decided that “leadership” that put the health of their company above the health of its employees, including me, didn’t deserve my hard work. I understand they were faced with a hard problem. But good leadership just doesn’t put its employees at risk. Lots of companies are doing hard things, and very few are mandating employees be in the office. Exceptional leadership would say, “Okay, we have this problem, how can we solve it without putting people at risk? Let’s brainstorm.” Going back to something that used to work (people in the office), that’s looking backward. I prefer leadership that looks forward and truly innovates. The management team at Alert seemed incapable of that. I had a Zoom meeting with someone in HR, which left me appalled that this person was allowed to be in HR at all, never mind at the top level. Let’s just say this person said some things which showed incredible insensitivity. Oh, and in the exit interview they promised me health insurance for 2 weeks after my last day, however someone canceled it BEFORE my last day! There may well be competent people working at Alert, I just didn’t see any evidence of it. I spent 3 months cleaning up that mess. Quitting Alert was one of the VERY BEST things I’ve *EVER* done for myself, period. I’m a much happier person. Run, don’t walk, away from Alert Innovation.

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Alert Innovation Response
3y
Thank you for your constructive feedback on your time with Alert Innovation. We take our culture very seriously. We endeavor to maintain all the things that are positive and make Alert special, while also adapting to our future needs as an organization. If you would like to share anything else, we do encourage you to reach out to a member of The People Operations Team, and you can contact us directly at HR@alertinnovation.com.
2.0
Aug 16, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* Pay is at or above the median in the Boston Area. There is a moderate amount of pay transparency through pay bands, but not individual pay. Ask for this information during your interview process. * Titles are sandbagged compared to the rest of industry. This is a good place to level up your title and pay, but holding on to that when leaving might be hard. * The goals ahead are extremely lofty, but if they are hit that will mean amazing success for the company and employees * Currently a 100% employee owned company. There is a potential pay out if things go well. * If you're not on a team being burned out, work life balance is good.

Cons

* The CEO and COO are using fear based tactics for motivation coupled with a round robin of burning out different teams to put out fires. * Recently, company values are taking a back seat if they aren’t convenient. They are spoken of often, but actions embodying them are fading while counter examples increase. * Inter group communication and coordination is in an utter state of chaos as the company scales. There are 9 VPs for the 250 employees as well as plenty of middle management. Most importantly it does not feel like they are pulling in the same direction. This could be an opportunity for an incoming middle manager/director to improve things, but for boots-on-the-ground employees you're going to catch the fallout without much empowerment to help improve it for now. * Nepotism and large cohorts of people from leadership's past jobs. Although neither of these are bad in isolated amounts, this is very common here and rarely ends up being entirely fair and neutral for all.

1.0
Dec 22, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

CEO wears glasses in his pictures so at least he looks smart

Cons

A list of his greatest hits: - The entire company is behind schedule. What does he do? He holds a mandatory company-wide, in-person meeting at a country club to tell everyone that if they don't like the way he is running the company they can leave. - When people start leaving he gets mad that people are leaving. - Tells everyone with a late Saturday email that we are failing and that if we don't get our stuff working we are doomed and says we need to work harder. - Told everyone that he deserves to get fired if he didn't make the product work by December. Guess what? It's December and he is still here.

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Glassdoor has 134 Alert Innovation reviews submitted anonymously by Alert Innovation employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Alert Innovation is right for you.