Textio Reviews

3.5

55% would recommend to a friend

(63 total reviews)
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Jensen Harris

30% approve of CEO

45% positive business outlook

Textio has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 63 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Textio 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

63 reviews
1.0
10 Nov 2020

Cataclysmic decline: An utter disappointment

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Attractive office (pre-Covid) centered downtown with easy access to bus routes.

Cons

I'll summarize my full Textio arc - as it will provide more context to where my journey began and ultimately collapsed into the most unhealthy and harmful professional experience of my career. Conceptually, I love the flagship product. It's what drew me to join the company in the first place. This was consistent with new hires I spoke with, and people subsequently joining Textio thereafter. They had designed and built a beautiful homepage; highlighting the product's core features, impact* (we'll cover this in a bit), and company culture. 2017-18 was the golden age of Textio. The culture was open and vibrant. People were unafraid to make mistakes and propose alternative solutions to challenges, while product iterations and enhancements made sense from gathered feedback. It was a truly dynamic work environment. People in Sales collaborated with folks in Marketing and Data science regularly. I felt like a vital part of the rocket ship (the commonly used metaphor to describe Textio). Yet upon leaving the company - I felt reduced to combustion fuel, incinerated into nothing which could easily be replaced. Mid 2019 is when company culture began to toxify, and questioning the quality of Textio's business impact was cropping up more frequently. However, 2019 concluded with no major shakeups and I was still proud to be at Textio, despite my waning faith in the product. Fast forward to March and Covid rocks every sector of the global economy. Textio had not diversified solutions to combat market fluctuations (the product's success is dependent on a strong hiring economy), as it's in the candidate communication space i.e. job description and recruitment messaging enhancement. Ensuing layoffs were imminent at the start of Q2. People in sales were applying to other roles, as Textio's market viability was looking bleak at best. After speaking to a few current customers I had good rapport with, it was clear that Textio was not able to deliver it's advertised results. This was common. Customers not renewing their subscriptions had always been a major hurdle and it was starting to catch up. Pivots to the product pitch seemed to arise monthly. It only confused people and diminished belief in what they were selling. In the last weeks of my time at Textio, I learned that our Engineering department had asked to discuss how Textio is positioned to customers and prospects in an open forum with Sales, but was blocked. There was a concern from engineers that our product pitch was not consistent with the data. We had an org-wide Zoom call where our CRO was explicit - Q2 was going to be a giant question mark. The CRO explained that the business had no inclination on where they were going to land at a revenue standpoint. This quarter was going to be "experimental" and goals would be re-forecasted after more data was collected. Therefore, "no performance plans could be enacted", as the company didn't have a firm grasp of what quota constitutes a successful (or unsuccessful) quarter during an international pandemic. It wasn't until the middle of Q3 2020 when Sales people from all teams were placed on PIPs (performance plans) for the revenue they generated in Q2. Leadership blatantly went back on their word. I lost the last bit of trust that remained. Each 1:1 I had was an interrogation. I felt attacked and demeaned for 45 minutes. I can't imagine the folks put on harsh PIPs and how miserable their experience must have been. Paired with destructive 1:1s, I was micromanaged into oblivion. I received almost hourly slack check-ins, and this person knew next to nothing about our sales process. It was torturous. I developed irregular sleep patterns and hadn't felt encouraged in months. I had no confidence and realized how real imposter-syndrome was. I also wasn't growing as a professional. Learning and development was substituted for panic-filled notifications. Now at this point, Textio saw a slight boost of inbound leads. During a team-wide call, the CRO concluded that the BLM movement was good for Textio, since more companies were searching for tools to (allegedly) boost their diversity. It was disgusting. To say police brutality targeting African Americans and the subsequent protests were a good thing for business was abhorrent. I was appalled. The CRO then went on to say in a different org-wide meeting that leadership may have been "too reactionary" to Q2 results. In other words, the PIPs were an egregious error. They lied about how people's futures at Textio would be handled. I left shortly after. I can't really articulate the sense of freedom I experienced after walking away from the most agonizing 6 months of my career.

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Textio Response
5y
It sounds like you had a rough experience this year. While I have a different perspective on some of what you’ve written, I’m sorry to hear about your impressions and exit experience, especially after a long and positive tenure at the company. If you’re open to discussing your experience 1-1 to help me understand further, please do not hesitate to reach out. Kieran
1.0
14 Feb 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- LGBTQ+ friendly - Minimal direct pressure to work outside business hours, unless it’s to work with a customer. That said, it's common for engineers to work evening/weekend hours without being explicitly asked to. - Unlimited PTO. - The company’s product is progressive and feel-good. You get to tell people you work on a product that materially advances gender inclusion! You get to believe this yourself as well, for awhile. - Reasonable benefits, for a startup. Textio covers health insurance premiums but doesn't match 401(k) contributions. - The office was chic, but it's now sub-let due to Covid. Any future physical space is likely to be equally stylish, have the usual free snacks, etc. - The rank-and-file employees are great. Textio had a halo in the press and in the employment market from 2016-2018. The product and culture don't live up to the hype, but the hype alone has attracted a collection of truly wonderful people who genuinely care about language and inclusion. There are many excellent and compassionate engineers. This was the best group of colleagues I've worked with so far. Unfortunately, these people are all quitting. Just under half of the engineering team has quit in the not-quite-one-year since layoffs happened in early spring 2020. That doesn't include engineering losses from the layoffs in spring 2020. If you are from an underrepresented group and considering working at Textio, find the people who share your background. Ask how long they've been there. Ask the hiring manager how many people with your background used to be on the team, but are no longer there. Textio is (and has been) bleeding their longtime employees, and their employees from underrepresented groups, even as they rush to hire fresh talent. Imagine what it takes to go through a job search and on-board to a new company while working remotely in a pandemic. About half (half!!) of the engineers chose to do this rather than continue working at Textio. If you're considering working here, you owe it to yourself to ask everyone in your loop about the talent drain and compare the answers you get.

Cons

- Storytelling is a core business strength, and a personal strength of both founders. Ensuring that the stories are fully true is not a priority. - Textio of 2016-2018 had a very strong employer brand, which it has failed to live up to. The current low morale and bleeding of employees is the natural result. - The product vision is fickle, and planning and go-to-market processes lack rigor. Textio stumbled on some early successes (2017 & earlier) based on their hype, but the more recent releases from 2018 onward have failed to achieve similar traction. Leadership continues to use ad-hoc structureless product planning rather than creating robust product roadmaps, clear go-to-market strategies, customer personas, etc. Product vision and roadmapping are woefully underdeveloped. A years-long lack of consistent, seasoned leadership in both the product and marketing groups has compounded this problem. - The company leadership is inexperienced and immature. This leads to all kinds of problems (details below). Engineering leadership lacks startup experience outside of Textio. This has resulted in ineffective planning at any scale in between "here's what we're doing this week" and "here is a 2-year vision document with no concrete commitments or timelines." It means Textio has re-invented their own versions of standard engineering practices (example: their squad-based project development which rests on a typical matrixed organization, but lacks sprints or any other structured way of agreeing on timelines/deadlines, and has no clear mechanism for matching engineers to work). Engineering also has a culture that treats even hints of disagreement as an affront to the hierarchy of management. Decisions made around HR and compensation continually undermine trust. Promises are made, then broken (example: in the wake of #BLM 2020 Textio promised to achieve pay transparency, but later diluted this promise down to the creation of standardized pay ranges for each role). Important deadlines are changed (example: annual compensation updates, always done in December, were pushed by several months into 2021).  Policies disappear and/or are selectively applied (example: rules governing the proportion of people from under-represented groups within candidate pools). There is a career ladder to govern employee growth and promotions, but it's also possible to be promoted or moved laterally into roles not represented in the ladder (surprise!). Without a record of what the criteria for those promotions are, how can anyone have confidence that the criteria are equitably applied?

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Textio Response
5y
While I disagree with your characterization of much of our internal circumstance, particularly around our compensation work, my offers to discuss people’s experience stand, and a number of people have taken me up on them. That offer extends to you as well. I’m sorry that after an apparently lengthy tenure at Textio, you’ve ended your experience with sour feelings. Best of luck in your next opportunity. I hope you’ve found a role and situation that is more what you’re looking for. Kieran
2.0
4 Mar 2020

Disappointed.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I worked along side a bunch of smart, passionate, and hardworking individuals. I made some great friends at Textio that I will truly miss. The executive team saw something in me which lead me into a career that I'm passionate about. I will always be thankful for that.

Cons

Due to personal reasons, I had to leave Textio, but was in a position to keep working remotely which would have been win-win for everyone involved. I was told that it was not feasible, not Textio's culture and that my situation was no more important than anyone else who have asked for remote work. (I accepted this and felt I left on good terms with the company) I quickly learned after my final day that none of that is true. There were others being considered for and plans were already underway. I've walked away feeling like I didn't matter after all. I thought I was appreciated and valued when leaving Textio but now thats turned bitter. Keeping me on remote for a little while longer would have made a huge difference for me, and I know our team would have appreciated the help.

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Textio Response
6y
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. If you're comfortable talking to me directly, I'd love to learn more about your experience with the remote work conversation. Our point of view has shifted on this significantly in the last year, starting with sales and more recently in light of the COVID-19 situation. I'll be the first to admit that I have historically valued co-location really highly and resisted remote work for Textio, and also the first to admit that the strong position was short-sighted. Thank you for your feedback. Kieran
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Glassdoor has 65 Textio reviews submitted anonymously by Textio employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Textio is right for you.