Don't care about their employees - Business Analyst Alloy Automation Employee Review

1.0
May 20, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company has good investors and the founders are smart as individuals.

Cons

The founders are very young and don't know how to manage people. Burnout is bad. They also have hired and fired without cause at least a half a dozen people in 6 months.

Explore other reviews about Alloy Automation

5.0
Dec 5, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good customer base and marketing. Able to try new things, test new processes, experiment a lot. People want to help and make time for you, especially in the early days to onboard and ramp.

Cons

Some turnover in roles as the company shifted strategy but made business sense.

1
1.0
Dec 4, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are no pros working at this company.

Cons

If you’ve ever wondered what happens when underqualified leadership attempts to speedrun building a tech company using only ego, instinct, and a rotating cast of burned-out employees, look no further. Confidence flows abundantly here — competence, less so. Strategy changes as frequently as the weather, typically after someone in charge discovers a new LinkedIn trend to chase. Turnover isn’t a problem to solve — it’s practically part of the business model. Employees cycle through faster than leadership can invent new buzzwords. Why fix dysfunction when you can hire a fresh batch of people to experience it firsthand? Communication is a highlight, assuming you enjoy being told that the problem is your perception, your tone, or your failure to ‘believe’ hard enough. Gaslighting is so refined it could power a small city — or at least keep a skyscraper-sized bonfire burning through morale and sanity. Concerns raised are either dismissed, reframed as personal shortcomings, or met with motivational speeches untethered from reality. Planning sessions are imaginative — goals appear to be generated by optimism rather than data. Targets feel less like strategy and more like creative writing exercises. Accountability flows downward, praise flows upward, and logic occasionally takes a sabbatical. In summary: a fascinating workplace for those studying cognitive dissonance, leadership delusion, and organizational self-sabotage. Others may find more stable opportunities elsewhere — even a coin toss offers better predictability.

5
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