Writer reviews

3.4

64% would recommend to a friend

(33 total reviews)
avatar

May Habib

70% approve of CEO

53% positive business outlook

Writer has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 33 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Writer employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

33 reviews
5.0
May 29, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Writer is one of those rare companies where the mission actually means something day to day. The engineering team and AI talent here are exceptional — you're working alongside people with serious depth, PhDs, and a genuine passion for building something that matters for enterprise. The C-level team is remarkably accessible and open — I never felt like my voice didn't count, which is rare at this level of company. The culture genuinely encourages you to speak up, and when issues arise, the company is actually trying to act on them. The technology is on an exciting trajectory — the foundations are being overhauled and what's being built now is going to be top notch. If you want to work on something impactful in enterprise AI, this is one of the best places to be right now.

Cons

Like any fast-growing AI company, things move quickly and processes are still maturing. Vibe coding is often encouraged over engineering rigour, which builds up tech debt that will need to be addressed as the company scales but I think it is world's reality nowadays. Tech lead selection criteria could benefit from putting more weight on engineering maturity, technical depth, and quality alongside speed and delivery. People management and coaching skills across leadership are an area with room to grow, especially for technically heavy managers. Product decision-making can sometimes feel more technically driven than it should be. These are real growing pains that you can encounter on any fast-growing company, but the company is aware of them and moving in the right direction.

2.0
May 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There's some truly talented/kind people at this company, and if you want to break into the AI industry this is a great place to start. Not many other companies let CSMs build agents (called “playbooks” cause we like to overcomplicate everything) and actually get your hands dirty. The clients you work with also keep you on your toes. You'll work with stressed out CEOs who have no AI strategy and only bought the platform because of FOMO, to ambitious VPs trying to make a name for themselves even as half their orgs get laid off. Pretty fascinating to get a front row seat and see how messy and cut throat the AI revolution is transforming corporate America. I've met more CSMs/AEs at this company that are more technical than SAs/TAMs at other companies, and a lot of time they self-learned or taught each other. Another "perk" is that there's so much churn internally they don't really fire anyone since they're desperate. Layoffs do occur though, but folks who leave are snapped up by other firms fairly quickly. This place is a pressure cooker where you can come in, learn a ton, and then dip for a better company when you can't stomach anymore koolaid they're pumping down your throat. Also free lunches.

Cons

You'll always be underwater and overworked. Unless the planets align and you pull a competent group of clients as your book of business, your churn rate is going to be high. All the other negative reviews posted are legitimate (take with a grain of salt though), so no need to repeat what others have said about toxic leadership, etc. If you do get hired here you're probably a Type-A, slightly competitive personality who takes pride in being good at their job. That makes it hurt when you continuously lose and are setup for failure. I think the reality is that all these issues stem from two facts: - The product doesn’t have a moat and can't keep up with the big labs' advances - Not many firms have defined what a successful AI rollout looks like because the technology changes too quickly, and they're ignorant on it's capabilities I love a good underdog story, but woof.. it's ruff out here.

2.0
May 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

On paper, this company should be crushing it. The business model is actually solid and well thought out, and the core technology is genuinely interesting. There are smart, hardworking engineers here who want to build something great, and when things are working, you can see the potential. It’s one of those places where you think, “if they just got out of their own way, this could be a top-tier company.”

Cons

Unfortunately, the reality is… kind of a dumpster fire from an engineering perspective. The biggest issue is a leadership culture that rewards loyalty and tenure over operational competence. A lot of engineering leadership came up internally from the company’s early startup days, but the organization never really evolved its practices as it scaled into an enterprise software company. There’s a noticeable lack of experience when it comes to building and operating reliable enterprise-grade systems, and it shows. The irony is that the company has aggressively pivoted toward enterprise and strategic customers, while many of the technical leaders guiding that transition have never actually delivered software at enterprise scale before. The mindset and operational discipline required for enterprise software—structured QA, operational ownership, release rigor, scalability planning, incident management—often feels either underestimated or actively resisted. Many of the company’s most severe incidents are self-inflicted and entirely preventable. Basic QA processes, regression testing, and change management are frequently bypassed in favor of speed and centralized control. Production changes are pushed with little rigor, and when things inevitably break, the same people responsible continue to gain influence and promotions instead of accountability. It creates a very real “failing upward” culture that has become a running joke internally. What’s particularly frustrating is how the company’s stated culture—Connect, Challenge, Own—plays out in reality. “Challenge” is only encouraged when it aligns with leadership’s opinions. If you push back on poor decisions, inconsistent standards, or obvious favoritism, concerns are quietly ignored or swept aside. There’s little meaningful accountability for leadership decisions, even when they directly contribute to outages or instability. “Own” is similarly inconsistent. A small handful of teams carry the operational maturity for the rest of the engineering org, while many others still lack basic ownership expectations. During incidents, getting the appropriate engineering teams engaged can be a complete crapshoot. Despite having incident management tooling available for well over a year, many teams still don’t have formalized on-call rotations or operational accountability structures in place. The frustrating part is that the company genuinely has enormous potential. The market opportunity is real, the technology is compelling, and there are talented engineers trying hard to improve things. But leadership bottlenecks, favoritism, and resistance to mature engineering practices continue to hold the company back.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 33 Reviews

Glassdoor has 37 Writer reviews submitted anonymously by Writer employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Writer is right for you.