A great place to work. I love it here. - Software Engineer Adbrite Employee Review

5.0
Jul 6, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people are smart and funny and the company has a great size, not "four people in a basement" startup, but not too big either. But my favorite part of adBrite is the support and encouragement you get in solving hard problems. They ask a lot of you, but they give you a lot of room and support to succeed. Great management.

Cons

I'd love it if I made more money. I have friends at little startups that make ridiculous amounts of money. However, I think adBrite compensation is competitive, and the quality of the work environment outweigh any salary envy I might have.

Explore other reviews about Adbrite

4.0
Jun 13, 2013
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great people, exposure to internet ad data mining.

Cons

They are out of business now!

2.0
Dec 26, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Downtown SF, (at the time) a possibility for a buyout, (at the time) free catered lunches, engineering team stuck together. AdBrite was a rising star - founded by a web celebrity in downtown SF with decent benefits, not the least of which was the free lunches they used to provide. AdBrite eventually moved locations to Market Street next to The Sports Club LA for which they provided a slightly discounted membership. And there was talent - so much talent. The talent that passed through the doors at AdBrite was unmatched. If only they could have retained that talent, they might have had a shot. But ...

Cons

Horrible management, disrespect from upper management towards employees, incompetent CEO, high turnover, technical leaders do not understand technology. The technology stack is a joke. Basically, instead of using proven open source solutions, AdBrite uses custom-rolled solutions for many of the layers in their stack which are far inferior to their open source equivalents. For the longest time, their search engine was running on something the CTO wrote. Iggy Fanlo (CEO) once sent out an email telling employees they needed to work 60 hour weeks. The problem is that there just wasn't enough work to do, nor was there motivation or any kind of guidance. The founders of the company frequently sent out disparaging emails telling employees that there were too many bugs in the site without setting clear goals as to how to solve the problem.

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