Social experiment - Anonymous employee ReadyTalk Employee Review

1.0
May 2, 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The benefits are good. That's why they rate well as an employer.

Cons

The place is clicky and good luck penetrating that. Management is running more of a youth hostel than that of an actual business. The leaders regularly flaunt the books they are following very literally to manage people. Unfortunately, it results is extreme indecisiveness. They'll keep making money regardless of how they manage the business so onward goes the experiment. Any professional hoping to do good work and grow here should reconsider.

Explore other reviews about ReadyTalk

5.0
Jul 14, 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Freindly folks and a relaxed vibe

Cons

None that I can think of

3.0
Nov 26, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

ReadyTalk seems to be a lifestyle company - as evidenced by the fact that 4/5 senior leaders founded the company 13 years ago and are still around. Health benefits are 100% paid for employees and their families. The company spends a LOT of money on perks - covering race entry fees, tons of groceries, kegs in the kitchen, random swag. It'd be easy to be a lifer - provided you're comfortable just doing the same thing for years and getting just a COLA+ salary adjustment year over year.

Cons

See above - this is a lifestyle company. If you have a lot of ambition or want to see your career develop, you will probably have to leave. The Execs have been running the show for years and don't seem to have any succession plan in place. Sure, the CEO is super healthy and fit, but when he said last year that his exit strategy was death.... what does that mean for the rest of his 180 employees? The corporate strategy and product roadmap seem to change with the wind, which can be frustrating and unempowering. Management and HR push a lot of books on strategy and respecting and developing people, but it's not consistently practiced by the most senior executives. "Professional development" is pretty well a joke, and performance evaluations don't exist. There's very little incentive to be a top performer.

7
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