ever wondered what it feels like to be the duct tape holding together a company that insists it’s made of steel. - Anonymous employee GivEnergy Employee Review

1.0
2 Dec 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The experience is unforgettable — in the same way a natural disaster is.

Cons

Working at GivEnergy felt like being trapped in an organisation where leadership enthusiasm never matched leadership follow-through. Commitments were made loudly, confidently, and in writing — only to dissolve the moment accountability was required. Pay increases, workload boundaries, and operational decisions lived in a perpetual state of “pending,” as if indecision itself were a strategic pillar. The people who should have enabled progress instead became the biggest obstacles to it. The daily reality was a never-ending avalanche of responsibilities, many inherited from roles that were never replaced, supported, or even acknowledged. Instead of structure or resourcing, the solution was always “just stretch further” — which is not agility, not innovation, and definitely not leadership. Delegation never existed; dumping did. You’re effectively running a full operation while the people above you treat urgency like an optional setting. The internal culture mirrored the leadership style: reactive, dismissive, chaotic. Communication swung between non-existent and condescending. Approvals vanished into a black hole. Processes were invented on the fly. Respect and psychological safety were not part of the employee experience. You learn quickly that the operational load is yours, the consequences are yours, but the authority to fix anything sits with people who don’t act on it. Perhaps the most concerning reality was the disconnect between the internal narrative about product performance and what actually showed up in the field. Issues were routinely underplayed, delayed, or downplayed rather than addressed transparently and proactively. Support teams were left to carry the downstream fallout of technical problems that leadership refused to acknowledge at scale. Customers assumed the organisation was aligned — meanwhile, internal teams were quietly juggling failure rates, repeated site issues, and escalating frustrations that were never escalated upward with the seriousness they deserved. It wasn’t just operational chaos — it was brand-risk management performed by the people with the least power to influence outcomes. If you want to understand what it feels like to run a company from the middle while watching leadership congratulate themselves for decisions they don’t make, obligations they don’t honour, and problems they don’t solve, this is the place. The workload will hollow you out, the approvals will never arrive, and the product problems will land on your desk long before they ever land on theirs. For anyone else? Protect your sanity. Keep scrolling.

Explore other reviews about GivEnergy

4.0
12 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Talented and collaborative software development teams in UK and SG. always ready to support colleagues and share knowledge whenever needed.

Cons

Despite facing critical challenges, the management and team consistently strives to deliver the best possible solutions. They have my utmost respect for their dedication and perseverance.

1.0
1 Dec 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Colleagues that are not executive level are great colleagues. Particularly, huge kudos to Senior Software Engineering Manager HL for setting proper coding standards, yet giving opportunities to colleagues under him to perform leadership roles and trying to protect colleagues under him from management hell.

Cons

The COO JL is the worst. Micromanages every individual he can, down to demanding reasons for being even just one minute late to office. At meetings, insists that everything be done his way, even as he has absolutely no idea how it is like to run a software team. The style of management is more akin to managing factory style workers in China where everyone is expected to turn up on time and be worked to the bone. Its a mess even at managerial level. Even in such a short duration, many good software heads quit as the COO argues with them all. Meetings turn into a warzone of words and blame culture. Company direction keeps changing multiple times. Projects are started and halted at very short notices. Projects get thrown around to different teams at short notices. Employees are hired and fired very frequently. No proper process. It is as if QA is redundant, as new features implemented by developers can be pushed straight to production even without going through QA. Even going through QA, quality is a mess and simple features can simply not work at all, resulting in multiple rejections from QA.

8
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