Bad leadership, toxic environment & no WLB. Won’t recommend! - Engineering Director ClickUp Employee Review

1.0
16 Aug 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1. Well funded. Raised a ton at the peak 2. Fully remote 3. Generally good engineers. Though some are boot camp graduates or internally transitioned so the pedigree and best practices mind set is missing in some cases

Cons

1. Most people are burnt out. Senior leadership has an attitude of squeezing out the last drop from every employee 2. Many average folks are in senior leadership position because they are close to the CEO. 3. No psychological safety 4. Fake it till you make it attitude. Watch the ads. They are cringe. Especially for people who work at the company because we know the truth 5. Values grunt work vs doing things the right way 6. Every decision needs blessing from the CEO who does not have good instincts especially in engineering 7. Buggy product. No competitive advantage in my opinion. Was able to capture some of the market by burning cash. 8. Extremely slow career progressions 9. Engineers have no voice

Explore other reviews about ClickUp

5.0
2 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work with brilliant people which is great

Cons

Leadership seems lost or either constantly changing

1.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people. Talented people doing their best in an unstable environment.

Cons

Over 220 employees were laid off, not because the company was collapsing or employees failed at their jobs, but because leadership made a deliberate financial decision that treated people as expendable once they had served their purpose. People who helped scale the platform, support customers, and build the company were discarded the moment it became more profitable or convenient to do so. What makes this worse is that this has happened before. Employees were reassured it would never happen again. We were told we were valued. Many of us believed it. I had just celebrated being one of the most consistently valued members of my team before suddenly finding myself among the 220+ without jobs. The messaging afterward felt carefully curated to justify the decision publicly while avoiding the reality employees experienced internally. From the inside, it did not feel strategic. It felt cold, calculated, and completely disconnected from the people affected. And make no mistake, “220 employees” is not just a number on a spreadsheet. That is 220 people with families, rent, mortgages, children, responsibilities, and lives built around the expectation that dedication and performance meant something. If you work here, understand the risk. Performance will not protect you. Loyalty will not protect you. Being told you are indispensable will not protect you.

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