Reviews by job title

43 reviews
5.0
27 Jun 2025

Review

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

advantages: it is a place where you can grow and explore different sectors, even understand what you like because there is a lot of freedom and flexibility to create.

Cons

The salary is usually not very high because it has many more advantages in terms of environment, benefits and people. I think it depends a lot on the stage of life of each person. For me it was a great enriching experience in terms of professional growth, I learnt a lot thanks to my teammates. It has given me the opportunity to meet people that I qualify as very good friends. Overall my judgement is positive and I am grateful of what I experienced.

5.0
17 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Factorial is an extremely ambitious company where you can learn a lot, very quickly. There's a strong sense of collaboration across different teams, and you're constantly surrounded by talented people who raise the bar. It feels like a great school at every level, from hard skills to leadership. The company is also generous when it comes to employee benefits, and there’s a real sense of autonomy. If you have an idea that makes sense, you’ll usually get the support and resources to make it happen.

Cons

Things move fast, and coordination can sometimes be challenging due to the company’s rapid growth.

1.0
28 Aug 2025

Account Manager

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The genuine positives are: (1) the benefits, especially private healthcare. (2) my team and some other colleagues from Product, Support, Ops etc. (3) Also the product is quite good.

Cons

Factorial has no clear career growth or development structure. Roles that should be offered to experienced internal employees are frequently handed to external candidates. The company shows little interest in retaining or developing its people — hiring and firing happens without much thought. Employees who have been there for years often stagnate, not because of poor performance but because of a complete lack of real growth opportunities. People management and development is essentially non-existent. Performance reviews are entirely performative — box-ticking exercises with no real substance or fairness. My own review, for example, was conducted by a Senior Leader who had no direct oversight of my work, barely knew me or interacted with me and still rated me “below expectations” without defining what those expectations even were or having enough consistent oversight to draw that conclusion. I’ve seen colleagues hit targets and go above and beyond, only to be blocked from promotions because they supposedly “don’t live the values enough.” without a clearly set criteria. Based on my time in the company and my observations, if you think critically, ask questions, or disagree with dysfunctional practices, you’re branded as “difficult”, "negative" or “not a team player.” Promotions and salary increases may be withheld from employees who are oustanding performers. I’ve even seen a bizare suggestion that to demonstrate “cooperation/teamwork,” you should take another leader out for lunch. In my experience, reviews here feel less about actual performance and more about maintaining control over employees. Toxic Work Culture This culture of fear and manipulation is quite strong. Every failure in leadership or communication was reframed as a “great opportunity” for employees to shoulder more work. If you questioned it, you risked being labelled negative and could face consequences such as being put on a performance improvement plan (PIP), which in some cases can ultimately end employment. Accountability flows downward only; leaders are rarely held responsible. Leadership provides very little coaching, training, or resources — only relentless pressure for results. People are forced to do the work of five roles (account management, sales with unrealistic targets, customer support, product support, and process optimisation/admin work) for one inadequate salary. Management openly acknowledges this, but dismisses it as “normal.” When employees raise pay concerns — especially over huge discrepancies between markets (e.g., AMs in one country on €20K while others with identical responsibilities earn €30K) — leadership diverts the conversation back to “work harder and hit your targets.” There is little transparency, and no recognition of contributions and achievments beyond targets. Unsurprisingly, people burn out and leave. Average tenure is barely a year, sometimes less. The “values” are mostly performative. There is little psychological safety: people are anxious, exhausted, and sometimes afraid to speak up and if they do, there are consequences. In my team alone, multiple colleagues developed health issues, had burnouts, and eventually quit. Leadership brushed it all off. The entire culture is short-termist: push people to their absolute limit to hit quarterly targets, then replace them when they collapse or leave. Uncertain Compensation Targets and variable compensation structures change constantly — every quarter brings a new scheme, and hard to plan around. You might work for months on an upsell only to discover that the structure has changed just before you close the deal, slashing your expected earnings. This kind of shifting erodes trust and demoralises employees. Conclusion What my experience showed me is clear: Factorial does not invest in its people, does not build careers, does not pay fairly and does not care about the health, and wellbeing of people. Reviews are arbitrary and unfair. Leadership is unaccountable, dismissive, and manipulative. Employees are overworked, underpaid, demoralized, and replaceable. Disclaimer: The views expressed in this review are based solely on my personal experience and observations during my time at Factorial. They are not intended as statements of fact, but as my subjective perspective.

5.0
25 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Factorial offers a very positive and inclusive work environment. The company provides tons of benefits: Cobee, Payflow, Wellhub, Kleta, Cooltra, language classes, internal lunches (like FIGA Lunch, Apeteat, NOra), discounts, and more. There's a strong afterwork culture that helps build great relationships across teams. One of the best parts is the flexible time management — there's no strict fixed schedule, which allows for a healthy work-life balance.

Cons

Like in any fast-growing company, things can move quickly and require adaptability. But this also creates opportunities to learn and grow with the company.

3.0
28 Oct 2025

Account Executive

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Culture, Benefits and opportunity to grow

Cons

Base salaries could be a bit higher

5.0
4 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I love my team and love working here!!! The benefits are incredibleee. Let's gooooo saleees 🚀. Really looking forward to the next Facts!!!

Cons

Its true that salaries could be better, but it kinda works with the benefits we have.

4.0
8 Jul 2025

SDR

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Best school you're going to be on. The amount of knowledge you learn here with all the different people is the most amazing asset you can get out of this job. Plus free coffee and good benefits, very good benefits.

Cons

The salary didn't meet my initial expectations. In the first six months you pay a lot in taxes so most of your salary goes to the government. That includes the variable salary as well.

5.0
5 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good atmosphere. The benefits are very complete. I can work from home a few days which is very helpful.

Cons

Tasks can change suddenly. One day is calm, the next is very busy. Sometimes it's hard to finish everything on time.

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Glassdoor has 983 Factorial reviews submitted anonymously by Factorial employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Factorial is right for you.