YuMe Reviews

3.3

42% would recommend to a friend

(135 total reviews)
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Paul Porrini

55% approve of CEO

31% positive business outlook

YuMe has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 135 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The YuMe employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

135 reviews
1.0
5 Dec 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- I have met some brilliant people here, and have made a lot of friends. I guess that being on the same boat brings people together. - You work so hard for your salary that you won’t have neither the time nor the heart to spend that money anywhere, so you get to save quite a lot while you’ll be there. That won’t be for long, though, unless you enjoy being treated like a slave. - The work in my team was actually very challenging and interesting; however the conditions under which you are expected to work will turn something that could have been exciting and enjoyable into a daily nightmare.

Cons

This place is by far the most terrible place I’ve ever worked at, on so many different levels. As they leave, people actually celebrate and get congratulated for resigning rather than for getting a new job. This company doesn’t have anything to bring to its employees except for a paycheck that is not even in par with the rest of the Valley. Employees are expected to be available to last minute meetings at night, sometimes as late as 1:00 am or so. The only way for someone to thrive there is to be an expert in boot-licking. - Incompetent, obnoxious management 'High’ management is made of the most clueless people when it comes to technology. Teams are being led by people who don’t have more skills (both from a technical and a leadership point of view) than a high school student, but have the largest egos of all people I’ve met in my career. That would be fine if they would still trust their teams, and listen to constructive advice that employees have tried to share with them all along. Unfortunately, if you happen to voice a concern of any kind, you’ll be considered the enemy. They will not hesitate to badmouth anyone who doesn’t fully agree to their outrageous ways, and forbid employees to speak to people they think are a ‘bad influence’. - Nonexistent products The technology is ridiculous and outdated, but management is not interested in new ideas. They have gone for the low-hanging fruit all the way, which might be acceptable for a young start-up but not for a 10-year old company. Creativity is discouraged, if not reprimanded. They would rather spend 1 week on a bad solution than 2 weeks on a good one even though it solves a problem that needed to be taken care of for the past 5 years or so. Last but not least, the customers get lied to, as their website is full of empty promises and misleading claims that don’t match in any way the technology behind it. - Micromanagement at its worst The managing team is so convinced that they know it all that they won’t let anyone do their jobs without intervention. One of the co-founders goes so far as to join most engineering meetings to make sure the meeting actually happens and that no one says something he disapproves of. When the many useless project managers get behind their own workload, or can’t do their job because of their lack of understanding of the project, they will lie about the updates you’ll send to them in order to stay out of trouble themselves. - Chennai office A lot of ‘engineers’ from the Chennai office are completely incompetent and under-qualified; however, because of their level of expertise in flattery, they will most of the time get management’s favors and approval to mess with the work of the engineers from HQ. This feeds the ego of the Chennai ‘engineers’ which builds an unhealthy power struggle where the less knowledgeable ones destroy the work of the best. For that reason, most of the projects never get pushed to production, and the few high quality people this company had among its employees have quit within months of joining.

2.0
27 Jul 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1. Located at close proximity to city. 2. Office is at prime IT center, so you have lot of options to move out, Once you found that you are in a bad place... 3. Some co-workers are really good but I have no clue why they still stay here. 4. If you are in good books of mgmt, you will be paid like anything and you can never dream of getting that outside. It may be a boon now but thats a serious issue because someday you will get into the bad book and you cannot move out until they throw you out then nobody will be willing to hire you because your technical skill is so outdated and pay is so overrated...

Cons

1. There is nothing called growth either in technical or managerial path. 2. If you say yes to everything that the top mgmt says then you are good else even god can't save you. 3. Number of developer to manager ratio is getting almost close to 1:2, i.e for every dev/tester you have 2 managers. One will do technical other will do project based and both have no clue what they are doing... With the current rate of hiring it will go to 1:3 soon... 3'rd manager will manage the swipe in swipe out time.... 4. You are required to present in endless calls which has no use to either the product or technology but you should be there and they will take attendance there.

1.0
26 Jun 2015

Management refuses to grow up

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

YuMe hires a lot of talented engineers and individual contributors so there is always so much to learn from the individuals. But they all leave quick once they understand the politics so grasp as soon as you can. If you can grow immune to politics and smothering, then you can join YuMe The product is good and has a lot of scope. It is not stabilized yet so there are many interesting and challenging projects in due.

Cons

Politics Management is run by gossips and backbiting No vision Your efforts will not be recognized unless you cajole the management Growth is only when you turn in your teammate to management Absolutely no transparency You're evaluated only by what others speak about you Forget work-life balance There is no hierarchy. When things go bad, there will not be anyone there to cover your back. This place can bring your morale and values down.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 135 Reviews

Glassdoor has 146 YuMe reviews submitted anonymously by YuMe employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if YuMe is right for you.