Toxic Management with Zero Sympathy - Anonymous employee Wallester Employee Review

1.0
Dec 25, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Nice team members. - Decorations for every holiday. - A lot of company swag as gifts — clothes, calendars, bags, and so on. (Though I guess that makes us walking advertisements). - Challenging work which can be motivating. - Salary is adequate.

Cons

- There's no flexibility at all. Work-life balance is very poor. The work hours are 9 to 18 every day, which messes with your personal life. Don't join if you have kids! - No hybrid set-up, you can only work from home one day per week, with very few exceptions. If you're having a work-from-home day, you're not allowed to work from anywhere except you're home — no cafés, no airport, nowhere. - 1h lunch break, that you have to spend at the office even if you don't want to waste time. You can't just skip lunch and leave earlier. If you want to leave the office for lunch, you have to be back in 15 minutes. - The management is rude, and has instilled a culture of fear among colleagues. You can't speak your mind or concerns or you run the risk of getting fired (literally immediately). - Rules for thee but not for me — there is no fairness between hierarchy levels. Management do whatever they want while expecting employees to follow rules to the dot. For example, they don't always come in at 9. - Company events can take up the whole day, and can be mandatory, even if it's a weekend event. During the event, there are usually a few presentations, during which management narcissistically congratulate themselves about what a great job they've been doing, and you have to sit there for hours and listen to them. - Offensive and sexist comments from management are a weekly thing. Perhaps more if you interact with them more often, I don't know. - Notice that there's no diversity in the staff. The company is over 90% Russian speakers. The language is almost a requirement. - There are no trainings, workshops, or learning opportunities outside of your regular work. The company does not invest in your skills — they just pay you to do a job.

Explore other reviews about Wallester

5.0
Mar 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I worked at Wallester for three and a half years during an important growth stage of the company, and it became a very valuable professional experience for me. Working in a fast-growing fintech environment gave me the opportunity to gain strong hands-on experience and contribute to real business initiatives with visible impact. One of the biggest strengths of Wallester is its people. I had the chance to work with many talented, motivated, and supportive colleagues across different teams, which made collaboration enjoyable and productive even during busy periods. The environment encourages learning through practice, and over time responsibilities naturally expanded, allowing employees to develop new skills and gain broader business exposure. The company operates in an exciting and competitive fintech space, providing exposure to real market challenges and opportunities to work closely with different teams across the organization. This created valuable experience in cross-functional collaboration within a scaling company. Overall, Wallester offers a dynamic environment where professionals can grow together with the company, gain practical experience, and be part of building and improving products and processes during an active phase of development.

Cons

As in many fast-growing companies, priorities can sometimes change, which requires flexibility and quick adaptation. Some internal processes and cross-team coordination are still developing as the company continues to scale.

2
1.0
Mar 31, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Convenient office location in the center of Tallinn 2. English language courses

Cons

-No growth opportunities -Lack of trust (many tasks are inaccessible to the team entirely), and QA is not involved in meetings about new features during the development stage -Weak interaction within the QA team; the team often learns about important details of new or changed functionality last, or even after testing or environment preparation has already been done -Lack of respect for the QA team’s work -Familiarity, violation of professional boundaries, and use of obscene language -Strict time tracking down to the minute — even 1–2 minute delays are unacceptable; a “clock-in, clock-out” factory-like approach -Remote work is not approved (“no one works on remote” — according to the lead) -Low competence of people in leadership positions; -imposed training with mandatory reporting via presentations -Initiative is encouraged in theory but discouraged in practice -Team members are involved in testing merchandise -Proposal to switch to a dedicated merchandise testing role (if for QA position is not valued or there is no work) was rejected — instead, it is expected to be combined with QA tasks -Personal remarks and demonstration of personal bases

4
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