Best culture in the world! - Anonymous employee Skillable Employee Review

5.0
26 Mar 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people are amazing. I never want to leave this company. Our entire leadership team is incredible. The nicest, smartest, most enjoyable people to talk to! I love my job and feel I have full autonomy over my work. Throughout the interview process it is an obvious choice that Skillable is the company to work for. We have a great product and a great vision. I love contributing to it!

Cons

Truly, there are no negatives at Skillable!

Explore other reviews about Skillable

5.0
26 Mar 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people here at skillable are great to work with, They are so open to new ideas, to sharing knowledge and jumping in to help whenever needed.Look us up we are certified as a GPTW. So that counts for something when existing employees are saying the same thing on an anonymous survey.

Cons

Not enough co works. We are a remote company but we do work on getting together often.

1.0
21 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Mid management and below are salt of the earth, real, genuine people. They are what makes Skillable.

Cons

Leadership often speaks about employee development, but in practice it is applied selectively and inconsistently. Some individuals receive meaningful investment and advancement, while many others are overlooked with little explanation or opportunity, regardless of performance. Talent development exists in theory, but very rarely in a way that is equitable, scalable, or intentional across teams. Rather than doing sustained, hands-on work to grow people internally, leadership leans heavily on external motivation tactics and high-level messaging. This creates the appearance of investment without addressing the underlying issues of trust, career progression, and day-to-day support that employees actually need. Decision-making is centralized and top-down, with frequent changes driven by executive priorities rather than frontline insight. If you are not prepared to conform at the mid-management level and below, or operate without meaningful influence, this environment will feel restrictive and transactional. Compensation is well below industry standards across most roles unless you are within the sales inner circle. Sales is clearly prioritized culturally and financially, while other departments are expected to absorb increasing responsibility without equivalent pay, authority, or recognition. The company once had a strong culture, but rapid and poorly grounded executive changes — particularly at the CEO level — eroded it. What remains feels fragmented, performative, and disconnected from the values leadership continues to promote.

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