Trainwreck - Anonymous employee FloQast Employee Review

1.0
27 Sept 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Excellent benefits, talented engineers, and a culture that used to be fun and honest

Cons

After hiring Yiftach as a new Director of engineering, he has pushed for faster development times at the expense of code quality, oversight, and even the slightest bit of architecture. Tickets are now created based on sales calls that are expected to be implemented within weeks, even for low priority tasks. Engineers are worked to the bone and expected to work long hours even outside of work time, and given little support by other teams that are all also overwhelmed. Meanwhile, errors in the app frequently go completely unhandled and basic access control checks are missing for most routes. Legacy code is growing rampant as we push out garbage code, and yet for many legacy repos there aren't even teams assigned to maintain them so when bugs pop up they go unfixed until a random team can be brought up to speed. The focus on fast development times over resilient code with any semblance of architecture has now taken an even further dive as the company decided to lay off 49 senior engineers (couldn't lay off 50 without a fair warning in California) from the R&D teams and instead hire 100 entry level engineers to speed up development. Included in these 49 engineers was most of the security team and what was left of the non-existent QA team. Good luck.

Explore other reviews about FloQast

5.0
27 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great management and Learning structure

Cons

A lot of internal meetings and can be strict on in-office

1.0
1 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Genuinely strong benefits. 12-week paternity leave is real and appreciated. The people I worked with directly were hardworking and talented. That's about where the positives end.

Cons

The CTO is systematically dismantling engineering, and senior leadership is either complicit or asleep. The work-life balance that once made this company a genuine differentiator is gone. Daily production incidents are now normalized — a direct consequence of gutting the QA team through a series of layoffs, forced exits, and outsourcing. The offshoring initiative has been a particular disaster for work-life balance. Engineers were told offshore teams would work around US schedules. That was not true. Expect pings on Saturday and Sunday. Expect late-night messages. The CTO himself will DM you on a Sunday for something that could have waited until Monday. The RTO situation is being handled with zero transparency. If you're within a two-hour radius of a California office, you're being quietly pressured to come in — but this has only been communicated to California employees. No formal announcement. No company-wide policy. Just quiet pressure. The CTO's hiring practices deserve scrutiny. A pattern of loyalty hires has brought chaos and stress into engineering. Whether these hires were rigorously vetted is a fair question. What's not in question is the impact: added instability, a culture of working nights and weekends, and an implicit expectation that everyone else does the same. Anonymous Q&As — once a meaningful feedback channel — were eliminated when the company removed anonymity. No one asks questions anymore. Funny how that works. The long-tenured, high-performing engineers who were FloQast have left in droves since the new CTO arrived. The institutional knowledge is gone. The culture is gone. The company I joined no longer exists.

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