Terrible place to work - Anonymous employee Talent Neuron Employee Review

1.0
Aug 9, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Ability to work from home Some nice employees (who have now left)

Cons

An awful place to work with horrendous management and a toxic culture. People were threatened with being fired/managed out if they didn’t comply with rampant drinking, backstabbing and sometimes bullying culture. Sexism often left unchecked. Management could induce fear over employees with no repercussions. It was a constant state of fighting for employment, and as other reviews have mentioned, labor laws (seemingly) being broken. I cannot stress enough how much you should avoid this company in its current state. There is no opportunity here, only disappointment and termination.

Explore other reviews about Talent Neuron

5.0
Oct 24, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The marketing team is upbeat, supportive, and makes meetings enjoyable. Cross-collaboration runs smoothly and other departments are willing to pitch in where they can.

Cons

There is so much product development/M&A-induced change/innovation that additional hats must be worn and role responsibilities are in flux.

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Talent Neuron Response
8mo
Thanks for taking the time to share feedback about your experience. So happy to hear that the culture in the marketing team is healthy and productive. Thanks for lending us your talents. Please don't hesitate to reach out if I can help with anything along your journey! Kind regards, Kerry Unflat
3.0
Jun 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Fully remote work. Good work-life balance (depending on the team). Most of the people are good, but most got laid off.

Cons

Multiple layoffs leading to poor morale and low job security. Frequent leadership changes and shifting priorities. Unrealistic expectations on outputs with smaller teams after layoffs causing burnout across all teams. Leadership often disconnected from employee concerns. Lack of clear long-term strategy and communication. Sales execution struggled, impacting the rest of the organization, marketing took the fall. Career growth was limited due to constant organizational changes. Leadership decisions felt erratic. CEO (Julie's) communication and conduct often felt unprofessional. The repeated layoffs eliminated several high-performing employees while lower-performing employees remained, making the process feel inconsistent and difficult to understand. It created the impression that performance was not consistently recognized or rewarded, which had a significant impact on morale and employee confidence.

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