Good for College Grads, Pause for Experienced - Anonymous employee Pinterest Employee Review

2.0
7 Jul 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pinterest does a good job of recruiting a steady stream of quality industry IC pros and some of the most apt college grads. The college grads are forming one of those networks that will help them throughout their career. It's impressive how well they've bonded and work together. Projecting a little bit, it's possible their network will be Pinterest's version of the Google and Facebook networks of early out of college employees. Pinterest is at a good point for young talent to take on reasonably large project areas and see a good chunk of what it takes to run a company. Very good job to take in the first few years of a career. Overall there's a good foundation for what could be a great job. The company baseline definitely cares about its employees. The perks are good with frequent team happy hours, nice quarterly offsites, quality local and healthy food. The goals and pace of the company enable a good work life balance. Compensation is competitive and reasonably structured.

Cons

There are far more cons than I would have expected for a company that is doing as well as Pinterest is externally. I think it is a core product that resonates with a large audience, but these problems will hold Pinterest back from becoming more than it is. The quality of management in engineering is mind bogglingly poor. It hits a level of incompetence I haven't seen at any of my previous companies. I've seen individually bad managers who soured their piece of the company before, but this is systematic. The exceptions are two leaders (previous managers from Google) who do a good job - but they are not enough to turn the tide and keep the other managers inline. I wish we were measuring good v. great, but we're measuring incompetent v. good. I agree with the other reviewers on discrimination and political infighting. That definitely happens, it's just a matter of how close you are to it within the company. My estimate is about a quarter of engineers are pretty close to it. Those are just the byproducts of the above stated problem. Other symptoms include teams out of sync, a low experiment/product success rate, unreliable data, unclear seniority levels, regular reorgs, people leaving without announcing or goodbye send offs, low psychological safety index, haphazard product innovation, and wild variations in resourcing compared to project size. For an experienced engineer, I would personally recommend waiting for a VP of engineering to be hired before joining. They'll have a direct impact on solving/aggravating the above problem.

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5.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work life balance, great office, smart colleagues

Cons

minimum meeting requirements can be tricky depending on your client book

1.0
8 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

WLB Remote work (which is slowly ending). Strong ICs

Cons

Poor leadership vision, strategy, and execution. Rebranding products that already exist as net new to chase a headline. Unclear career growth unless you are internally connected to “the right people”. Middle management that is there to boost their career / repackage IC ideas as their own with zero credit. RTO rollout was botched leading to senior sellers leaving. Lots of toxic positivity and virtue signaling

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