Great Product, Unexperienced Leadership - Technical Integration Manager Tattle Employee Review

2.0
Feb 1, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The product has huge potential with its use cases and market share. Great potential to integrate with every point with the customer journey. The CTO has a great vision to protect the core of the product.

Cons

CEO is a blocker to everything that happens. The reason why anyone with actual SaaS experience is either fired because of intimidation or quit realizing how immature the sales and account management is. How can you qualify anything when the CEO is directly cold emailing, doesn't understand BANT in a technology sense, and rely on 0 inbound marketing leads. It is the reason why the company has plateaued and pigeonholed into only one niche of hospitality tech. It's like giving a Ferrari to a kid with his learner's permit. That bad.

Explore other reviews about Tattle

5.0
Jul 13, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Pay and benefits are excellent - Working environment is very positive. Learning and taking the time to "do it right" are encouraged - Management are highly capable, good communicators, and lead by example - Lots of growth, both for the business and personally

Cons

Fully remote can make it hard to feel connected with the company at large. Currently no planned company-wide events to get everyone together.

2.0
Feb 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good place to learn for the self-directed who don't mind a LOT of ambiguity - ICs are a talented, kind, diverse group that know and care for each other

Cons

- The executive team is disconnected from development reality. The executive effort is focused elsewhere, leaving the technical leadership to set pace and culture alone. That leadership values loyalty over performance. There are favorites who receive support and others who are micromanaged or managed out, regardless of contribution. Technical leadership is often too focused on working in the trenches to lead fairly and effectively. - There was a push to create a middle management layer that felt disconnected from the real work. The roles were filled without regard for technical proficiency or soft skills necessary for small team management, resulting in managers who will not advocate for their teams or push back on unrealistic demands. - The product team struggles to define clear, realistic requirements and roadmaps. There is a clear lack of understanding of how software is built, leading to churn, rework, and minimal pushback when the customer changes their mind late in the cycle. Engineering is mostly blamed for the delays this causes. - The culture is often high pressure and transactional, with team members being let go after a crunch or deliverable completion. - Offboarding is cold, abrupt, and lacks transparency. No one is sure where the hammer will fall next, only to figure it out when someone fails to make their next meeting.

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