North worth the time - Alliance Manager Tipalti Employee Review

1.0
29 Sept 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People are very nice (to your face). Lots of tools

Cons

Where to start: 1. They will promise you rainbows and unicorns before you join. But reality is all bs 2. If you applied the job that says remote, but you live within commutable distance of one of their offices. They will mandate you to go to the office. The dishonesty, the way they change their mind like how you would change your clothes 3. Biz travel: be aware to pay out of your pocket for not sitting in the middle seat. 4. A $8.3 bn unicorn accounts payable automation company but does not offer their employees corp credit card. They don't care about how much impact business expenses will have on your personal finance. If you join, be sure to set aside a couple of thousand dollars for business travels. They will make you pay your bookings first then reimburse you a couple of weeks later. 5. I have seen managers who can't do pitch presentations because they don't know(don't care) the status and details of programs under them. Managers skip pitch practices, probably because they are afraid of being found out that they are incompetent. Honestly, what are they here for? 6. They tell you your OTE but with quota too high only few people reach it. So they don't have to pay you as much 7. Managers play favorites. They should take some workplace ethics training, unconscious bias, racial microagression...

Explore other reviews about Tipalti

5.0
10 May 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great job to start with

Cons

Low salary for the job

2.0
18 Feb 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good people. My direct manager was excellent and very supportive. Free lunch when in office. Health benefits are okay.

Cons

There have been numerous layoffs, and overall it feels incredibly unstable. The product has a lot of issues, which makes the onboarding role much harder than it needs to be. When deadlines are missed, leadership tends to blame the onboarding team, even when you’re doing everything you’re supposed to and the challenges are outside your control. It doesn't help that the Product has a lot of issues, and leadership will push on us to sell on more product features, that will make implementation even longer and the features are not ready to be used by customers. Sales regularly overpromises to customers, then avoids accountability when those expectations can’t realistically be met. Most process changes seem to benefit Sales while making onboarding even more difficult. Pay is below industry standard, and as a result, many of the strong employees don’t stick around for long. While my coworkers are great, it seemed like everyone was miserable. Always complaining about customers, leadership, turnover, layoffs, low pay, and questionable policies. It's not a healthy work environment, and leadership needs to introduce changes immediately if they want to attract and retain talent. Performance is heavily data-driven, which isn’t inherently a bad thing. However, evaluations tend to focus too narrowly on metrics like average implementation time, without fully considering the many factors outside an employee’s control that impact results. As a result, overall performance and contributions don’t always feel fairly assessed.

3
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