Remitly Reviews

3.7

64% would recommend to a friend

(500 total reviews)
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Sebastian Gunningham

21% approve of CEO

58% positive business outlook

Remitly has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 500 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Remitly employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finance industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

500 reviews
2.0
23 Oct 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fast growing industry Remittances are shifting from cash to digital. If the company doesn’t totally screw it up, they’ll continue to be able to ride the tailwinds from that Work mode Some fully remote and many hybrid teams and enough people around to have office culture for those who do go in, but it seems like that may be on the way out. Get a clear commitment from your hiring manager if you want remote or hybrid long-term Data Altogether pretty clean and easy to work with, though there are big gaps on the product side People The golden age is over, but the company is still able to hire some pretty good resumes, and Seattle office probably still has a much lower jerk quotient than some other notable tech companies in the city (not sure this is stable though). A lot of people really do want to do right by their colleagues, but more and more, incentives don't encourage that. Marketing team is very distributed (remote) and more diverse than the rest of the company. There are still a couple of leaders who are well-loved by their teams.

Cons

Product/business Core product is not up to par with competitors. PMs get the blame for this, but 1) leadership is unclear on its priorities 2) Many Engineering teams have been understaffed (1-3 engineers for core parts of the product) for years. Choice to move many Engineering teams to cheaper markets (Poland, elsewhere) has strained communication between Engineering & US-based PMs and the organization has been slow to do anything to respond to complaints about the risk & inefficiency this creates. New initiatives have all fizzled so far (though maybe it’s good that the business is willing to recognize a sunk cost fallacy, at some point). Data Unclear what the relationship between Data Engineering/ML Analytics is supposed to be. The leadership of the former does their own thing and only brings in Analytics when their plans are 90% done. No VP+ role in data, no career progression for Data Scientists, roles not aligned to industry standards. Just not a mature organization from a data standpoint. Customer Centricity It seems like the business is getting further away from customers, not closer. Passbook (closed neobank initiative) was targeted at Mexican immigrants to the US, but run by an all-white team. North America markets drive the business, but over the past year, now very few people in the Business team have ever lived in North America (no one in leadership; run from London). Understanding of customer needs, lives is super uneven across teams. Leadership Almost everyone is in their first-ever C-level role. “Stay paranoid” attitude is not playing out in a healthy way. Infighting, scapegoating, excusing bad behavior & mismanagement for favorite directors/VPs is spilling over and corrupting the great culture the company was known for in recent years. HR Chaotic. Rife with personal conflicts, toxic personalities allowed to flourish. Turnover is incredibly high in the recruiting, HR Business Partner, and HR ops groups. HR representatives seem to be lacking in some core training around employee conflict resolution, DEI, even labor laws (some HR reps supervise staff in multiple countries). Tendency is for HR reps to make immediate problems go away for Management at the expense of protecting the company. If you’re Level 4 or below, asking HR for help will probably only make things worse. DEI “Diverse” candidates be warned. The fact that most of the DEI team left this year tells you what you need to know. Smooth-talking men from well-represented backgrounds & elite schools are strongly encouraged to apply. The company has plenty of data on how bad attrition for women, POC, and people who have taken FMLA is at & above Level 3, they just won’t talk about it. Is it worse than other corporations? TBD, but it’s certainly not better. The progress the former DEI team was making stalled out around IPO time. Being in an employee resource group, particularly in leadership, can feel like wearing a “Troublemaker” label. Gender: Most engineering teams are all men; where there’s a woman on the team, she’s definitely the one being asked to do all of the team lunch reservations. Women can enjoy the comments about how great their smile is, how emotional they are, but how they’re not very strategic in their performance reviews. It's definitely not like this in every team, but these things happen way more often than they should, and employees have no recourse when they do. Men can get satisfactory performance reviews for shipping nothing, so long as their boss likes them. Underperforming men leave when they get new external jobs. High-performing women get assigned additional tasks like mentoring, recruiting, cultural centricity promotion, & emotional labor-type work that the company will never reward, and then be told they did not drive enough business value at their next review. The departure rate for women at L3 and above (across functions) has visibly accelerated since Q4 2022. Multiple well-respected women who have complained about gender bias issues in the past year have mysteriously had their roles eliminated. Race: Management has expressed skepticism that ‘diverse’ teams can actually “perform” to managers that make an effort to make the company more representative of the customer base (immigrants). Only a few VP+ leaders are past the ‘I don’t see race and gender’ and ‘I have a black friend/I have a daughter’ level on their DEI learning. FMLA & Disability, new parents: As another review said, if you need disability accommodations, good luck. Nursing mothers pressured to do non-essential travel, managers told that covid illnesses are not an acceptable reason to push back non-business-critical work. New mothers have had it made clear to them that having a baby and taking leave is the reason they weren’t promoted.

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Remitly Response
2y
I appreciate you taking the time to share your thoughts about Remitly. Your insights are valuable as we continue to make Remitly a great place to work. Thank you for recognizing the smart and compassionate people we have the privilege of working with every day. I’m proud to work in a high-growth place that attracts exceptional people who want to serve our customers. We deeply care about employee experience and always look for opportunities to learn from feedback and improve. You’ve raised several important topics. I take your comments seriously and will review these concerns with others. If you are open to it, I would welcome you contacting me (or any leader you feel comfortable with across the team) to listen and discuss your feedback further. Thank you again for sharing your perspectives and for your contributions to our customers and business. EVP, Customer & Culture
2.0
2 May 2019

Culture needs improvement, management needs direction

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some of the most intelligent, worldly coworkers you will ever get to work with. Technically unlimited PTO, although it is more like 2-4 weeks of vacation depending on your manager and role. Mission-driven company, CEO is genuine and "walks the talk." Free snacks, coffee, beer.

Cons

Tendency to hire from outside instead of promoting qualified talent from within is demotivating - this is a new problem (past year). Incredibly bandwidth constrained across the company and slow hiring, advancement compound the problem. It's an exhausting place to work because the company did not properly prepare for growth and has dozens of open roles, understaffed teams as a result. Remitly's culture has always been aggressively masculine, not unlike other tech startups - men tend to make up the majority of leadership, the loudest voice wins in meetings (men allow each other more time to speak, even if they don't realize it), meetings are about argumentation and proving yourself.

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Remitly Response
3y
Dear Reviewer, Thank you for taking the time to provide feedback on your experience at Remitly. We appreciate your positive comments about the intelligence and mission-driven nature of our coworkers, as well as the CEO's dedication to our values. We understand your concerns regarding our tendency to hire from outside instead of promoting qualified talent from within. We are actively working and have made strides in the past year to promote internal growth opportunities. However, we recognize that there is more work to be done and we are actively purposing this. We also appreciate your feedback regarding our company culture. We are committed to creating an inclusive and diverse workplace, and we understand the importance of promoting a culture that allows all voices to be heard. Thank you again for your feedback, and we hope to continue to listen all the feedback on Glassdoor. Best regards, The Remitly Team
2.0
11 Apr 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good mission Registered high growth till recently Talented workforce

Cons

Poor leadership Toxic culture Product is not differentiated. It is race to the bottom.

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Remitly Response
7y
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. I'm sorry that you had such a negative experience at Remitly. That's atypical so I'm curious what happened in your experience that led it to be so bad. I'm glad you noted that we have an exceptionally talented workforce and that we're very mission-driven. That's very true. I understand it's often hard to find objective data on what is 'fast' vs. 'slow' growth, especially when taking into account the size of a business and right comparables, which is why I've used this benchmark before that shows we're right around the 75th percentile of high performing companies in this dataset (https://medium.com/parsa-vc/revenue-growth-benchmarking-for-startups-c682b98c0270). We've reached this milestone because of high customer loyalty and because customers love using our product. We'll continue to invest growth and in continually improving our product on behalf of our customers. I take your comments on leadership and culture very seriously so would welcome the opportunity to learn more about your experience. If you'd like to chat about that or anything else in your review, you can always reach me at matt@remitly.com and I'd welcome the opportunity to have coffee with you.
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