A Toxic, Soul-Crushing Culture Disguised as a “High-Growth” Startup
Pros
They post an AI-generated picture of you on your birthday 🎉
Cons
Working at Palta was one of the most disheartening professional experiences of my career. It’s a textbook example of how not to run a company — a toxic dumpster fire built on vanity metrics, burnout, and sycophancy. The culture glorifies overwork and blind obedience. Employees are expected to be available around the clock — even during holidays — to “optimize” social campaigns and chase results at any cost: personal, ethical, or professional. The unspoken rule is simple: if it makes the numbers look good, it’s fair game, no matter how manipulative or damaging it might be to users or staff. The company is managed by a tight circle of yes-men around a CEO who has no interest in the people working beneath him. Communication is nonexistent, and leadership is more concerned with buzzwords (“flywheel,” “growth,” “AI obsession”) than with actual value or integrity. The business model revolves around misleading sign-up funnels and deliberately confusing refund processes designed to squeeze as much money as possible from users, particularly in the US market. Meanwhile, product quality and innovation take a backseat — nearly everything is outsourced to AI with no real human oversight. As for management: your “1:1s” are performative at best. Expect your manager to multitask in other tabs while pretending to listen, because these meetings only exist so they can claim you’re “supported” when unrealistic targets inevitably go unmet. If you care about your wellbeing, your principles, or working somewhere with a shred of humanity — look elsewhere. Palta doesn’t just drain your time; it drains your soul.