Warning - Proceed with Caution - Anonymous employee Anvato Employee Review

1.0
27 May 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

On the surface, there is much to like about Anvato – Super Bowl, one of the companies that won the NAB Award, the opportunity to work with big clients. The company provides free lunch on Fridays. Also, the lunch area has plenty of soda, cereal, and chips, which comes in handy since employees usually eat at their desks on the other days. The compensation is slightly above average for Silicon Valley.

Cons

Extremely high rate of turnover - Excluding upper management, few remain. Upper management wants you to believe the turnover is due to poor engineers who were unable to perform. The reality is that there were plenty of “Top Performing” engineers who left due to poor communication, unrealistic schedules, and lack of consideration for employees’ personal schedules. Unrealistic hours - Employees are on call 24x7. Although they do not provide cell phones, upper management will call your personal cell phone whenever it is convenient for them (late in the evening, early morning, weekends). This is understandable if there is an emergency but this happens almost on a daily basis. If you do not pick up, you may be reprimanded publicly through group texts/emails. Unfortunately, it was common to see burnt out engineers at the office. Ad hoc work - is common and most communication by upper management is through email or the phone. There is no planning beyond a couple days. To complicate matters, some people from upper management have horrible spelling and grammar, leading to more confusion. The overuse of the words “top priority”, “urgent”, and “important” desensitizes their meanings and mask their tendency to overcommit themselves to customers. Employees are given more than they can handle. I consider myself a “learn it/do it yourself” engineer – someone passionate about technology. At Anvato, however, Engineers are often marginalized - having to learn skills that were completely different from the job position they interviewed for in a short time. For example, I’ve seen engineers who were hired for Encoding forced to work on complicated PHP issues for the Support team. There were PHP engineers who had to fix complicated bugs in Ruby or Front-end JavaScript engineers who ended up writing Android Unit tests exclusively. Again, this is to fill gaps that were left due to high turnover. Honestly, this could have been a good opportunity to learn new things if our engineers didn’t already have so much on their plate. However, in reality, this unpredictability is more stress/chaos than an opportunity to learn. Lack of transparency - Employees are not allowed to communicate that they are leaving the company till their last day of work or later. People tend to just disappear. *Cue Tumbleweed* As I mentioned earlier, on the surface, things appear great. Dig a little deeper and you may not like what you find.

Explore other reviews about Anvato

5.0
9 Jun 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Coding skills get sharper. I got frustrated quite a few times, because senior engineers rewrote the code I submitted. I learned a lot about how my code could be better: my half page loops and functions were reduced to two lines of regular expressions and sophisticated closures. Company builds core technology, not another social sharing site or something simple. Big customers, big product, interesting coding challenges. New customers and projects all the time.

Cons

Requirements change fast - customers change priorities. After reviews, you may be asked to completely rewrite code. Meetings are short, and you are supposed to understand goals and write your own documents. Engineers are not shielded from customers via project managers. Development speed is way too fast.

4.0
5 Jun 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Company values coding engineering abilities. Cool projects. Your code matters, really goes into production fast. Senior engineers are very ambitious. Easy to earn respect if your code is good. Compensation directly proportional to coding skills. Core product is very stable, but company is pushing new features fast, so work is exciting, but it is really a lot of coding work.

Cons

Schedules are tight. Company seems to value engineering abilities only. If you just know the basics, your work is considered trivial, so you are pushed to learn more by yourself. Managers without deep technical background have difficulties, and they don't survive here. Even customers are quite technical. Priorities shift fast, unless you finish work on hand, too easy to fall behind. My opinion is that pretty much every startup here in the Valley, you have got to work hard. This place is no exception. I don't know about a lot of big companies, but compared to the places I worked before, people come to work here at 9.30 and leave at 6.30 pm at Anvato which is way more reasonable than most. No peer pressure to leave at midnight and hang out with co workers. I however, work some nights to finish my work after dinner, which is ok for me. As soon as you finish, more challenging work is put on your plate. Telecommuting, Work from Home is discouraged here BTW.

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