Cool if you like working in a college dorm - Anonymous TickPick Employee Review

2.0
Jun 22, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay is decent, happy hours, fre

Cons

Very bro-y, close minded culture. Just saying don't work here if you're a woman or a person of color. Sexist environment. I complained but I was told that I needed to come up with a solution. Not only that, but there's micromanaging leadership, who ask for but do not listen to valuable feedback, work life balance is terrible, and I know it's a start up, but their lack of effort to fix things that very qualified people suggest as legitimate points of structural improvement is offensive. Ridiculous expectations on metrics with NO TRAINING. It pays okay, but there are too many other better jobs out there. Don't do it.

Explore other reviews about TickPick

5.0
Apr 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Everyone is welcoming, easy going, nice stability

Cons

not much, unless you want hypergrowth

1
1.0
May 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Minimal technical barrier to entry. • The brand name carries some weight, though the internal reality is crumbling.

Cons

• Documented Churn & Systematic Layoffs: The company operates on a "burn and churn" cycle, frequently liquidating ~33% of the headcount (including entire Data and Front-End departments) to mask fiscal mismanagement. Job security is zero. • Erosion of Engineering Standards: Technical seniority is disregarded. Management utilizes AI-driven tasking as a punitive tool to enforce compliance. Product Managers with zero technical background ship production code, leading to massive technical debt and a "garbage-in, garbage-out" cycle. • Gambler’s Leadership & Strategic Bankruptcy: There is no product roadmap. Since new regulations neutralized their "no-fee" competitive edge, the business model has collapsed. Leadership relies on "surface-level" acquisitions to fabricate growth metrics for investors. • Exclusionary & Hostile Culture: The "Work Hard, Play Hard" mantra masks an exclusionary demographic bubble. Success is determined by "political performance" rather than code quality. Management openly discusses hiring candidates to "pitting them against each other" for stagnant wages. • Failed Executive Retention: Tier-1 leadership (including Senior VPs from top-tier firms like Squarespace) cannot survive the internal friction. If industry veterans are pushed out by the CEO’s ego, standard engineers have no path to success.

1
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