Awful place to work, never really put employees in a position to succeed - Sales/Marketing/Business Development Stellic Employee Review

1.0
Apr 6, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote-Work; Good Benefits with 401k and medical

Cons

Always saying “we are a family” No clear communication from immediate supervisor or any supervisor No real access to resources Never put on a performance improvement plan or any way to prove myself No real opportunity to grow - can’t really move up within the organization

Explore other reviews about Stellic

5.0
Apr 5, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Such an exciting and thoughtful company. Stellic is still small and is going through the challenges of scaling, but the founders have focused on the right things - the right people in the right places. Everyone is very talented and while the teams transform and evolve to be more effective, things can be challenging, but the long term goals are always aligned. Pay is good, stock bonuses are nice, the partners we interact with are awesome.

Cons

Would like to see a 401k match and some better insurance, but those can come with time.

1
3.0
Jul 17, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Mission-driven work: The company is tackling real challenges in higher education, and it’s rewarding to be part of that. Talented, caring colleagues: You’ll work with people who are smart, thoughtful, and genuinely want to make a difference—for students, for partners, and for each other. Opportunity to have a voice: In a small team, there’s room to contribute ideas and shape your own path if you're proactive. Remote flexibility and room for autonomy depending on your team.

Cons

People systems are still maturing: Manager training or career development isn’t yet consistent. That can leave employees navigating challenges without clear support. Burnout risk is real: The team is lean and highly motivated, but that can create pressure over time—especially when growth outpaces infrastructure. The primary solution offered tends to be hiring, which takes time and doesn't always address short-term strain. Leadership turnover has created instability in some key areas, particularly engineering and product/design. That’s made it harder to build sustained momentum. Company values aren’t always operationalized. The intent is there, but values like ownership or excellence can feel like added pressure without the right boundaries in place. Emotional labor can fall unevenly—those who naturally take on team-building or care work often do so unofficially, and it’s not always seen or supported.

5
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