cPanel Reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(73 total reviews)
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Christian Koch

51% approve of CEO

57% positive business outlook

cPanel has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 73 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The cPanel 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

73 reviews
1.0
21 Feb 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Free phone - Free lunch

Cons

cPanel is an Unstable Company: Sales have been stagnating, but that's hard to tell, since there is no sales department, no finance team, no accounting - no one in charge of making the business grow. "The product sells itself" - says hardcore cPanelers, cPanel leadership, and other failed companies. Also, very suddenly last year, the CEO decided to sell the company to (and buy an equal shares in) an Oakley Capital investment group - the same group that owns cPanel's main competitor, Plesk. Not much has changed in terms of operations at the company, for now. There have been a few disastrous leadership meetings with the Plesk executive team, all which have lead to the CEO planning to step down, and the planning of demotions for current leadership, mainly due to lack of experience, output, and abilities. Additionally, the platform is built on Perl, a language some developers in the community think of as dead. Perl is extremely difficult to hire developers for and build on. This causes cPanel to make strange and self-harming hiring and retaining choices of developers who are 'too-valuable' to lose from a coding perspective, but hurtful to team function. cPanel is also a clunky, 21+-year-old platform that has just been added onto over the years and re-skinned a few times. They churn out a few features a quarter - sometimes with or without major bugs - but until 2018 they didn't even know how many people were USING the features they built. And they still barely know now. Developing for the sake of developing, or developing for the loudest voice is a common practice at cPanel. Lastly, cPanel is not 'innovative.' The culture is risk-averse to a detriment, anti-conforming, and problem-pointing rather than problem-solving. Traditional hosting is a very mature industry and people have been shifting more quickly to cloud environments, yet cPanel has done nothing as a company to address this shift. cPanel is behind the times and slow to produce output. Additionally, the risk-averse Security Team and SysAdmin Team don't like collaborative, cloud-based solutions, such as Office 365 or GSuite/Google Docs, making it incredibly difficult to get your job done. If you have a data-analysis job, have fun using Apple Numbers to analyze your data set. cPanel is an Unprofessional and Toxic Work Environment: Unprofessional behavior runs rampant throughout cPanel, removing all aspects of consideration and respect towards fellow coworkers, ruining the company culture and allowing others to imitate bad behavior with no consequences. Someone in a mid-level position literally threw food at an admin during lunch because they were angry that admins didn't order chicken parm that day. The individual kept their job for years after that, AND got a promotion. Harassment happens on a weekly, if not daily basis, and usually people get fed up and leave. Developers are able to act however they'd like, which leads to their managers, product owners, and scrum masters to baby them and create an environment where they get still get their way, and somehow some work gets done. A lot of "bad apples" have actually left the company, and then shortly CAME BACK after only a few months because other companies do not tolerate such behavior. Rather than removing the bad apples from teams or the company, they move people around from team to team, resulting in either 1. a lot of bad apples ruining teams throughout the company or, 2. entire teams with very little output that are built entirely of intolerable people who no one else wants to work with. The CEO says "we can always find a spot for them somewhere." One developer was literally fired for STEALING CODE from other websites. He was then rehired later and is now working on (read as: holding up work and refusing to collaborate with) 3 development teams. Not sure how this helps the company culture, or what kind of message it sends to other employees, other than: if you steal, it's okay! The 'Leaders' at cPanel have no experience leading and cannot enable their employees: An executive was fired from their position in May 2017. Employees in that department were told the position would be refilled in 3-6 months. It wasn’t until 2018 when they POSTED the job description. After a year without a director, half of department had left. They hired a new manager (non-executive) in September 2018. It is now February 2019 and the department has officially had 100% turnover in 1.5 years. During this time, the department BEGGED for direction, but the director who took over in the interim had NO experience leading that department and has such poor leadership skills. Under this director, for this department, 0 merit-based raises were given out, 0 bonuses were given out, 0 bonus-structures were implemented, 0 promotions were given, and 0 feedback was listened to or implemented. Meanwhile, in all other departments - ALL of those things took place. In every single other department during that 1.5 years, raises were given, bonuses were given, new bonus structures were implemented, and changes were made to the department due to direct feedback. Leadership plays favorites, so if you are considering a job at cPanel, make sure you get on the right team. Additionally, there is an extreme lack of alignment between different departments and goals. The marketing team had worked on a website redesign for a year and successfully launched their portion. However, the team responsible for updating the store design had failed to put it on their backlog and work it into their trinary (4-month) goals, so they didn’t even start working on back-end development until the new year. This came as a surprise to the marketing team, since the CEO was breathing down their necks for a year, but not the development team? Strange. There are no overarching company goals, except to “increase sales” - which is a weird goal to have considering there is no sales department. cPanel Lacks Any Transparency. Decisions are made behind closed doors often. For instance, for the manager they hired to replace the fired executive, they only let the team interview a single candidate for 25 minutes before hiring that person - 25 minutes to determine team/company culture fit, subject matter expertise and skill (since only people in the department had this specific expertise and skill), and managerial skills/style. Since being hired, the manager hasn’t been a good fit. The last 3 people have all left under this manager due to their lack of skill (surprise), inability to lead, secrecy with which important team decisions are made and timeframe in which those decisions are communicated. cPanel leadership is not transparent when it comes to revenue/profits, so you don’t really know how the company is performing month over month, year over year, etc. It’s very difficult to get information on cPanel's customers, licenses, etc. which is extremely debilitating for job functions that require this information to be successful. cPanel's databases are a mess, and oftentimes inaccurate. Gaining access to pulled data or to be able to pull data yourself is all but impossible, so the entire company is essentially operating in the dark. Since the acquisition, they had to (were forced to) hire a CFO and other financial roles because it is so unclear how above (or below) water the company is. Decisions come from top-down, usually with little explanation, or enablement. cPanel is like the Wild Wild West in terms of processes. Sometimes there is free rein, which causes confusion and often poor work, especially in the external communication realm. Sometimes there are arbitrary or bureaucratic processes that are inefficient or unnecessary. All of this makes it difficult to get good work done on a consistent basis, because some people break important rules that are either there or not, or, too many unnecessary rules are in the way of accomplishing simple tasks. Pay transparency and job function transparency are non-existent. No one knows even close to how much the executives make. Job descriptions are sometimes in limbo and personal goals to align my performance with are not given. Sometimes, managers attempt to change job descriptions mid-year, which would ultimately change goals. Somehow, though, while everything is changing, it is not clear as to how your value is being measured at any time.

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cPanel Response
7y
We are very sorry to hear about your frustration with cPanel. Thank you for your feedback. We think cPanel employees say it best - in a recent anonymous engagement survey, an astounding 90% of employees recommended cPanel as a great place to work! This has been the consistent trend for many years. We encourage you to reach out to EXD, any member of the Leadership Team, or the employee hotline with your concerns. We care about your experience here at cPanel and we would like the opportunity to discuss any misinformation and misunderstandings.
1.0
15 Apr 2019

Toxic culture

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Catered lunch (tax deductibles, free phone, and casual attire

Cons

A strict work environment and hierarchy structure. Managers and executives can't keep anything confidential. Gossip Town. It is hard to get raises and promotion, unless you know the right people. No work life balance, vacation time sucks, doctor note is required to take a sick day, toxic culture and some managers abuse their power

2.0
2 Nov 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

High investment in learning. Be aware this investment in learning will not translate into skills you will be encouraged to use on the job - this is not an environment that encourages innovation. Free healthcare and 401k matching were great. You will have the opportunity to work with some incredible and intelligent people.

Cons

cPanel is the perfect example of a software company with good intentions and expectations of becoming a cultural pioneer falling completely flat because of lack of strategy and poor leadership. They are 100% unable to effectively compete in the tech market - this has nothing to do with being based in Houston, but rather how executives choose to operate the business. Most executives were chosen based on their technical skills rather than their strong leadership and strategy skills, so it isn't a surprise the result is an extremely reactionary, finger pointing, command and control environment. cPanel definitely falls in the "Amber" category of Laloux's model. Some executives not only utilize horrible practices such as gaslighting, destructive conditioning, nepotism (both friends and family) projection, covert threats, patronizing, sexual harassment, condescension, and smear campaigns - but they encourage their direct reports to use them as well! The best way most people at the company have learned to navigate this behavior is to "just keep your head down" or suck up to the boss. HR is not present as an effective resource to protect employees, rather they spend more time helping (protecting) management. Blame or fault of the current state can't only be placed on these executives. Their ugly management practices have given them praise and promotions so why would they believe they need to become better leaders? Try to give constructive feedback to them and you are essentially blacklisted. They rule with their egos. There is a very strong "I'm smart enough to do anyone's job, so all of you are beneath me" sentiment. Additionally, there is such a lack of transparency or honesty within leadership and the average employee can do little to improve their situation. An example of this is HR has become famous for sending out "anonymous" surveys to employees to gain feedback when it is quite obvious the system is not anonymous. Employees are treated like dumb children to be manipulated instead of the intelligent and capable adults they are. Goals are nonexistent because real goals the company can rally around would call for a level of transparency of information leadership is not comfortable with. Strategically cPanel does not understand how they fit into the current market and how they can improve their market share. Product Management's strategy for improving cPanel is to constantly dogfood it, so they only ever see a very specific piece of their customer base. This is not a company setting themselves up to be around for much longer. If you are female, this company is not a friendly place for you. Lip service has been paid lately to make cPanel more female friendly - this has taken the form of going to a few "women in tech" conferences and attempting to recruit women to join, but there is no strategy in actually making cPanel a better place for women to work. Maternity leave is an ignored concept. Mansplaining will happen to you all day long. And, yes - you will make CONSIDERABLY less than your male peers. Especially those that are less qualified than you. If cPanel actually cared about promoting women in tech, they would ask themselves harder questions, fire employees that don't embody core values, pull real data behind their discriminatory pay practices, and make it fully transparent.

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cPanel Response
7y
We would like to thank you for taking the time to give us your feedback. We are proud that our 401k match and free employee healthcare are benefits that made a positive impact during your time at cPanel. That said, we're really disappointed that your experience working at cPanel did not align with our long standing goal to deliver the best employee experience. We really value feedback and are committed to considering all points of view as we continuously find ways to improve. We wish you all the best and thank you for your ongoing contribution to the betterment of cPanel through your feedback. Employee Experience Department
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Glassdoor has 77 cPanel reviews submitted anonymously by cPanel employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if cPanel is right for you.