Pros
Good benefits, hybrid work environment
Cons
Engineering at Tradeweb is severely held back by years of accumulated technical debt and an almost complete lack of meaningful engineering support. Core systems are brittle, poorly documented, and resistant to change, which makes even small enhancements painfully slow. New product development and feature rollouts are routinely delayed—not because of lack of talent, but because the underlying infrastructure is in such poor shape. Decision-making at the top of the technology organization feels disconnected from reality on the ground. Technical concerns raised by engineers are often dismissed, and there is little accountability for long-term architectural decisions that continue to hurt the company. Leadership appears more focused on optics than on fixing foundational problems, which has created deep frustration across engineering teams. The company also suffers from weak organizational structure. Roles and responsibilities are unclear, priorities change frequently, and cross-team coordination is ineffective. This lack of structure directly contributes to a toxic work environment where blame is common, ownership is rare, and burnout is widespread. Culturally, the firm has taken a noticeable step backward. Many long-tenured employees openly acknowledge that the company was better run in the past, with clearer vision and stronger leadership. Today, morale is low, and it’s difficult to see a credible path toward improving engineering velocity or culture. If you’re an engineer who values clean systems, strong technical leadership, and a healthy work environment, this is a very challenging place to be.