Used to be a great place to work - Anonymous employee DNSFilter Employee Review

2.0
Feb 8, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- A lot of great coworkers - Amazing annual retreat - Work from home with flexible schedule - Fully paid medical and dental insurance - Maternity/Paternity leave - 36 hour work week was a nice benefit, but not everyone was allowed to use it and it was recently cut anyway

Cons

- A dizzying amount of senior leadership turnover - Ever changing priorities leading to a graveyard of abandoned projects and rework with everything being an emergency - A culture of finger pointing and blame - A lot of reactive and short-sighted decision making - Complete disregard for the input of subject matter experts

Explore other reviews about DNSFilter

5.0
Feb 18, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I had an outstanding experience with DNSFilter from start to finish. The interview process was straightforward, transparent, and genuinely enjoyable. Everyone I met was incredibly helpful, welcoming, and excited about the work they’re doing. The onboarding was thorough and well organized, making it easy to feel set up for success right away. The sales team especially stands out — amazing, supportive, friendly, and truly team-oriented. There’s a strong sense of community across the organization, and the office has such a lively, positive energy that makes coming to work something you actually look forward to. I genuinely feel like I’ve found my home here. Couldn’t recommend it more highly.

Cons

none that comes to mind

1
1.0
May 27, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The remote-first aspect was great while it lasted, but leadership is actively dismantling the few good things this company had going for it.

Cons

Toxic Culture and Lack of Accountability. The culture here starts at the very top, and it's incredibly toxic. The CEO has openly insulted the entire workforce during all-hands meetings, calling employees "sad, sloppy, and pathetic." Since then, real communication has stopped—now we just get pre-recorded, scripted videos of him in his penthouse talking about "transparency." Case in point: in one video, he promised everyone that remote jobs were safe, and shortly after, an entire remote team was laid off to be replaced locally. Extreme Nepotism and Vanity Spending. If you aren't a favorite of the executive inner circle, don't expect to get anywhere. Nepotism is rampant. Family members are on the payroll, and certain people skip the standard hiring process entirely, landing Director titles with close to zero experience and getting promoted within a month. Meanwhile, company funds are burning through the roof on the CEO's personal hobbies and sports sponsorships that no one else in the company cares about, while actual working teams are stretched thin. The high turnover of executive assistants tells you everything you need to know about what it's like to work closely with leadership. Severe HR Failures and Treatment of Women. The way women are treated here is a massive red flag. At a recent company offsite, a top executive displayed disgusting, toxic behavior toward multiple female employees while heavily intoxicated, and faced zero consequences. The most alarming issue is how HR and Legal handle workplace misconduct. HR protects the leadership team rather than the employees. The environment has become so toxic for female professionals that multiple successful, tenured women chose to resign simultaneously without fallback roles just to escape the culture. Do not expect HR to support you if you raise a legitimate concern.

3
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