Snap Reviews

3.4

48% would recommend to a friend

(1,184 total reviews)
avatar

Evan Spiegel

28% approve of CEO

19% positive business outlook

Snap has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 1,184 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Snap employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
13 Apr 2015

Poor management. Negative culture.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Free lunch and dinner - Casual attire - Work by the beach - Small company means bigger impact on the user base and on the product

Cons

- Top-level management is churning, most recently our COO - Unpolished CEO who loves to fly off the handle and fire people who disagree with him - Complete secrecy and lack of trust: even as an employee & shareholder you're not allowed to know any information about the company: projects, users, valuation, etc. - Face-time in the office matters. Unlike every other tech company, working from home is frowned upon. But you'll be too scared to ask, so it doesn't matter. - Mandatory Wednesday evening meetings.... seriously. - Very junior leadership across the company - Shocking amounts of red-tape and bureaucracy for such a small company - Negative, fear-driven, top-down culture - Less competitive salaries, benefits, & perks to Silicon Valley competitors (see below) - Horrific equity vesting schedule over 4 years: 10%, 20%, 30%, 40% whereas almost every other company you vest 25% a year for 4 years. - 10 days of PTO a year and 5 sick days (No, I'm not joking, and yes this is 2015. Better not get sick this year... or any year!) - No performance reviews/salary adjustments, etc. - No bonus structure - No 401k matching - All those really cool tech company perks you've heard about: we don't have any of them. - Far from the rest of the tech community in the Silicon Valley (means limited options when it's time to change jobs) - Cost of living in Venice/Santa Monica is insane. Bay Area prices. Less Egregious Cons: - Working by Venice beach can actually be pretty annoying, loud, or even scary - If you didn't join the company early enough to get a parking spot, you have to park in a lot 1 mile away and take a (free) shuttle to the office. The shuttle starts going back to the lot in the evening at 6pm. Good luck getting home if you need to leave before that (but you won't need to leave before 6, because you'll be too scared to ask)

1.0
11 Jul 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1. Working at the beach 2. Free food 3. Learn new things

Cons

1. Work is not very interesting or challenging 2. Employees are required to work on very menial tasks, irrespective of their interests 3. The user growth for the product is stalling. There is literally no active user growth in the last 5-6 months 4. Senior management lacks vision, capability and good team-building skills

1.0
7 Nov 2016

Be very very careful

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Stock and compensation. Free food. Benefits aren't bad for a start up. Being in Venice beach is nice.

Cons

Work life balance is hands down the worst I have ever experienced in my entire career. I have overheard management indicating that it's okay to ride employees very hard because "nobody in their right mind would leave the equity on the table." Very toxic culture. Expect 60+ hours a week and the majority of weekend and company holidays to be mandatory. Even if you are doing 60 hours a week, expect to get dirty looks because of the Amazon-on-steroids workaholic culture that is imposed from the top down. I cannot stress enough how bad the work life balance is. If you are considering an offer, you should consider it a trade for 4 years of feeling horrible. Management is incredibly inexperienced, out of touch, and has no grasp on reality. Decisions at the top level are completely arbitrary and leadership regularly ignores the advice of their subordinates. Management will send out mails after a mandatory weekend telling employees how it was "so cool" and "felt like a startup again." You will absolutely have your skills squandered and ideas suppressed. As the company nears IPO, people are focused on empire building and keeping high quality talent suppressed. This leads to a ton of C-list talent being hired, which is very frustrating. It's very typical for only a narrow segment of your skills to be utilized and attempting to change that will incur a heavy penalty.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 1,184 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,543 Snap reviews submitted anonymously by Snap employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Snap is right for you.