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One Legal

Acquired by InfoTrack

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One Legal Reviews

3.1

52% would recommend to a friend

(46 total reviews)

Ed Watts

53% approve of CEO

52% positive business outlook

One Legal has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 46 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The One Legal employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

46 reviews
1.0
5 Jul 2020

Just say no

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I really can't think of any. It's a good work/life balance?

Cons

I thought about quitting my first week, and I should have followed that instinct. One Legal has a culture of bullying, diminishing women, anti-team mentality, and fear. Lack of accountability from HR During my first month, I gave a presentation, and the 60+ year-old founder (then-CEO) was in the room and made an awkward comment to me about being pretty. To their credit, HR later called me in to check on me, but they also shared that he's made comments like that many times before -leaving me feeling like even if I pressed the issue it would not be resolved. At a holiday party, the founder then hit on me again. I came home confused, and my boyfriend pointed out there's a glassdoor review that literally warns women about the founder at social gatherings. When I came to HR, I was met with excuses and the protection of the senior staff. One Legal made me so uncomfortable in my own clothes that I completely changed my attire for three years. During my first week, someone in leadership told me that the all-male engineering team had a private Slack channel where they commented on what I wore every day. I worked at a top law firm before this; I know how to dress professionally. For three years, even the person in leadership would comment on what I was wearing when I walked into a room. It could be "harmless" comments like about a print or color, but it meant he was looking at me. One Legal's anti-team mentality left me sobbing in the bathroom on multiple occasions. I had an employee who would cuss and storm out of the room during team meetings. There was another employee who told me that his manager "made his life a living hell" for his first year. The team would also make disparaging comments about our international contractors. One time, after a particularly obstinant moment with an employee, I went home. My colleague told me that when he confronted this man about his behavior towards me, the man said he wasn't serious and that "he just liked to mess with me." I brought all of the above up to a new senior manager for the department. I did not see anything change. Near the end, things got pretty heated when a new c-level hire took over. In one year, I had six bosses. Only two of my bosses had prior related experience. One boss had never worked in tech before and could not describe how software development worked. The only qualified boss I had was a woman who was forced out by this new c-level hire. His tactic? Yell at her until she quit. That c-level member was so good at riling people up that I would often hear shouting matches going on. One time, I went to a new-hire dinner. While there, this c-level member interrogated one of my colleagues to the point that someone slammed a glass onto the table. It was so forceful that the glass smashed and broke everywhere. I was told HR tried to press this issue, but eventually left the company instead of fighting with the founder and CEO over the issue. I was routinely paid less than my male colleagues. I have an advanced degree from a top 5 school, prior product management experience, and also came from the industry. Not only was I paid below market, but I was also paid less than comparable men in the same position. My peer disclosed that his pay was more than $10K higher than mine. Another male peer was paid a "director" level salary and 0 years of experience in my field. One Legal invests in people that end up complicating its core business. It holds on to slackers and bad apples way too long (years). The now-CEO stays in his office and never talks to anyone outside of exec staff. I should know - I sat right next to his office for the last couple of months there. I now work in a place with super sharp co-workers that value kindness and teamwork, strategic planning, and clear leveling. It's given me the perspective to see this place as unfortunate and toxic.

2.0
26 Jul 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There was a time when this was a good place to work. That time has passed. The only "pro" I can come up with is I don't work there any more.

Cons

A "key" hiring by the company single-handedly torpedoed company morale and culture, from which it has yet to recover. Long time management members either left or were pushed out. Promises of new products and increased revenues never materialized. Leadership is to busy reading books (Lean Startup...how's that working out?) or watching fishing videos to care and has no ability to determine the direction of the company. Key hire has no clue of what he is doing. Hires his friends for key roles so they can kick back and spend their day ordering things from Amazon. Tells everyone else they are unimpressive. Industry being taken over by a giant. One Legal cannot compete with the current management team.

avatar
One Legal Response
9y
I understand that change is difficult for many and I’ll be the first to admit that One Legal is right in the thick of things. Disruption and innovation in the legal tech space is here and I wouldn’t have it any other way. Is it messy? Sure. Can our learning processes be improved? You bet. I understand the cultural changes I’m promoting aren’t for everyone and that’s ok. I’m proud of the team we have and for them, the challenge to democratize access to the courts and the data held within is a once in a lifetime opportunity. The key criterion to success at One Legal is a willingness to embrace change – personal and professional. If you’re in the game and executing - great! I have your back 100%. And if you’re not, I remain committed to your success in another role or if necessary, getting you in a good place outside the organization. I regret your career at One Legal didn’t pan out and hopefully you are in a better place now and able to move on. Robert DeFilippis, President
1.0
7 Dec 2017

Customer service

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice offices with good parking and easy to get on and off of freeway to drive from cheaper housing. Customer service friendly and easy to make friends with other workers.

Cons

No way to get a job out of customer service. Owner really interested in women employees especially at company parties and picnics.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 46 Reviews

Glassdoor has 47 One Legal reviews submitted anonymously by One Legal employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if One Legal is right for you.