Transferroom Reviews

4.3

85% would recommend to a friend

(39 total reviews)
avatar

Jonas Ankersen

74% approve of CEO

90% positive business outlook

Transferroom has an employee rating of 4.3 out of 5 stars, based on 39 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Transferroom 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

39 reviews
4.0
18 Dec 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Very good people to work with in the commercial team. Exciting company with new things happening often.

Cons

Wasn’t a people first company and leadership not the best. Didn’t listen much to internal feedback for a while but things started to change.

1.0
21 Jan 2025

Growth stifled by impossible founder - could be a dream football workplace

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

TransferRoom is an exciting company at its core, offering a unique subscription product and "speed-dating" deal events that provide a valuable platform for football clubs. The business has seen impressive growth to date, successfully acquiring over 800 clubs. While the day-to-day culture and spirit among most employees create a fun environment, significant challenges in leadership and organizational strategy make it a mixed experience overall. The Pros: * Exciting Product and Offerings: The subscription-based platform and the global deal events are genuinely innovative and have made a meaningful impact in the football industry. The product itself is a significant draw for clients and employees alike. * Collaborative Culture Among Colleagues: There’s a strong sense of teamwork and camaraderie among employees. Colleagues are supportive and aligned in their goals, creating a family-like atmosphere outside of leadership. If you like football - it's a great culture to embrace with similar fans. * Improved Remote Working Policy: The company has made progress on its outdated working policy, evolving to 2 remote days per week, which is a positive step in employee flexibility.

Cons

* Founder Communication: The founder is a poor communicator and introverted leader. He can be confusing and contradictory. While he avoids speaking up in meetings, he frequently sends aggressive emails and Slack messages offloading streams of thought. This erratic communication style creates ongoing unease. * Lack of Strategic Mindset The management style is heavily focused on short-term, iterative growth with no established long-term strategy. Efforts to plan strategically are dismissed, as the company willingly constrains vision to a 12-week horizon. While this has been sufficient in the past, it limits strategic thinking and building long-term growth plans. * Disjointed Functions: In absence of central strategy the different functions inevitably silo, causing conflicting priorities. For example Commercial will chase one topic of the month (e.g. football club acquisition), while Product and Analytics prioritize something else. Or different employees will duplicate the same project work in parallel without discussion. * Micromanagement and Lack of Trust: There is a paradox of hiring industry experts from proven industries (SaaS, Football, Tech) while not being ready to induct any senior leadership to absorb fresh views. The founder will dictate projects, overruling any new perspectives and expertise. Continued micromanagement stifles the potential of the team - while degrading professional value and morale. * Senior leadership unfit for purpose While functional leaders are strong and knowledgeable, the top leadership operates as an echo chamber to the founder, comprising of loyal, like-minded individuals who comply with his thinking - regardless of professional aptitude for their roles. Commercial leadership lacks any commercial background, while in Marketing, the founder will instruct tactical requirements himself and creates functional friction. Six different senior marketers came and departed TransferRoom, each surviving less than twelve months. * Lack of job security or compensation plan Despite +120 employees, the founder takes a hands-on yet knee-jerk approach to performance management. He will offer arbitrary pay increases for his most loyal employees - while firing new starters overnight whom he doesn’t agree with. The company suffers from a total absence of any standard performance processes. Your job is never safe, and survival depends on navigating a tightrope - telling the founder what he wants to hear, and acting on his instruction. * Office Infrastructure: The Westminster office is poorly maintained and lacks adequate facilities. The founder infamously sits by himself in a “headmasters office” on the top floor, summoning individuals for 1:1 meetings at his discretion. Meanwhile he demands his workforce attend the office beneath him, where there is one shared meeting room, and zero confidential spaces.

5.0
9 Jan 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company is really good and has great atmosphere from the top down. The colleagues are amazing and it literally feels like a family on the daily basis. I’ve never felt so good and appreciated like I felt at TransferRoom and I can assure you that many of my ex-colleagues have the same feelings. The company cares for your feelings and wellbeing and gets the best of you in a fast paced environment where you literally grow and develop your own skills every week.

Cons

I can’t really think of any

Viewing 1 - 3 of 39 Reviews

Glassdoor has 42 Transferroom reviews submitted anonymously by Transferroom employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Transferroom is right for you.