Caxy Interactive Reviews

3.8

67% would recommend to a friend

(11 total reviews)

Michael LaVista

100% approve of CEO

36% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

11 reviews
5.0
3 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There were great opportunities to solve really tough problems whether you wanted to manage a team or focus more on the engineering. Management was very accommodating if you had personal issues and tried their best to support you. Some of our clients were rapidly expanding and it was rewarding to frequently see the work I was completing go live. The team was extremely talented and there was a wide range of skillsets. I felt that I was often able to walk over and get thoughts/feedback from anyone on the team and loved hearing about what they were working on. The work was often difficult but it was equally rewarding. Generally I didn't feel there wasn't a problem we couldn't solve given enough time.

Cons

Key management had some bottlenecks at times so reviews/questions might take longer to get scheduled. Sometimes there were pauses in work approval from clients and during those times it was difficult to stay bill-able.

5.0
2 May 2026

Great place to work

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I’ve been here for about three years and I have grown more at this job than any other job I’ve had in the past. I’ve had the opportunity to work on many different projects and have been able to see projects through from start to completion and be really proud of the work that not only I have done, but my teams have done as well. One of my favorite parts about working at Caxy is the culture. I’ve never been in a space where people show up for you and work hard to land projects and win together. The pay is on the higher side and in line with my position and workload.

Cons

Fast paced environment, if you are less senior and not willing to do the work to skill up, then things may be challenging for you if you are not a more seasoned individual.

1.0
5 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You may get exposure to different projects and technologies simply due to how quickly teams change Some coworkers are supportive and trying their best despite the environment

Cons

Extremely high workload with constant pressure to rush work out the door. Speed is prioritized over quality, which can make the work frustrating and unsustainable. Very heavy micromanagement. Time is tracked down to the minute, and that time can be questioned if management chooses to. It often feels like someone is constantly watching how every minute of your day is spent. No bonuses or meaningful incentives despite the workload and expectations Layoffs and staffing cuts happen often enough that it creates a feeling of instability. Many employees feel like their job could be at risk at any time. Very high turnover. Teams change frequently and it’s common to see people leave after a short period of time

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Caxy Interactive Response
1mo
Thanks for sharing -- there is a lot here -- and while there are parts that require some context to the nature of our business, there are still some actionable steps we can review and take back to leadership for training as it relates to communication about hours and stability. We'd love to connect as a current employee, but we've provided some notes below in the meantime to help. ---------------------------------------- REGARDING BONUSES: We tend to prefer a higher base pay and fully covering insurance premiums for employees and their families and matching 401K contributions over individual bonuses. We do* offer bonuses based on company profit each quarter. During quarters where there aren't bonuses, the profit margin wasn't high enough to deliver them. However, even in those years we generally have smaller holiday bonuses, including last December and the December before. In 2023 and some of 2024, quarterly bonuses were distributed across team members based on billable hours they contributed and additional funds for the MVPs of those quarters. ---------------------------------------- REGARDING MICROMANAGEMENT: It was surprising to read that there is heavy micromanagement because most of the employee satisfaction results highlight autonomy, flexibility, and ability to try new things as things that are positive. We were even nominated as a Chicago SunTimes Best Places to work 2025 which was based entirely on employee surveys handled by a 3rd party service. Executives did not participate in those survey responses or any part of that process. If the micromanagement piece really is the tracking hours to the minute -- It is true that we require that time be tracked to the nearest 5-10 minutes in Harvest. Most folks use the built-in timers, but some record their hours toward the end of the week with proper descriptions to justify the time. Product Managers are required to justify that time and will question parts they can't justify before clients challenge it. It's rare that people are asked about their hours unless there are continual discrepancies in what their hours say they do and what they deliver. This person brings up a really interesting point and something to consider if you're looking at getting into consulting. I fully get that among the annoying parts of the job is recording hours -- that's the downside. The issue is that it's how we get paid. If you've ever received a bill for something and wondered to yourself - "I'm paying for what??" - then you know what it's like for a client to get a bill with time entries that aren't clear, aren't what they asked for etc, or maybe the bill is late because it took us so long to put it together. It's a pain, I get it. That said, this is good feedback for us and we'll review how that message is getting delivered because I'm sure there are opportunities for improving how we provide information about the why behind the ask. ---------------------------------------- REGARDING RUSHING TEAMS VS. QUALITY: We aren't able to verify the notes about pressure to rush work and allowing teams to focus on quality. While we do make a big deal out of production issues and misses, we have pretty hefty processes for releases, sanity checks, and pre-/post- release testing processes. We are a consultancy and some of our clients are regulatory which means dates are hard to move. That said, we have processes built in for team members to speak up and contribute to estimates, share risks and issues, and request changes to due dates. Almost every project we have at Caxy has an escape rate to production of less than 5% which means production is stable and quality is pretty good. It is something we've focused a lot of attention on in the last 3 years as we went from nearly 0% test coverage to up to 80% test coverage on several projects and test cases written for manual testing on many more. We're always open to feedback here -- and would encourage leveraging the tools available to do it if you aren't comfortable reaching out directly -- our employee surveys, written personal/self reviews, peer reviews, mentor checkins, 1:1s, retros, and informal connections with team leads, directors, or executives. One of our values at Caxy is to speak/listen fearlessly. We hate thinking that there is someone here stewing about something to discuss. ---------------------------------------- REGARDING WORRY ABOUT TEAM EXITS: I understand that people leaving the company brings up uneasiness. We mention that almost exactly in every announcement we make about team exits or team changes; we request specifically for you to reach out if you have concerns. The truth is that we try our best to make sure that people that are terminated are not surprised -- and very few people are, which we're pretty proud of. We offer severance in most cases and in other cases where positions are being eliminated, we offer a notice and ramp down of 4-6 weeks on average. While the final announcement may surprise the larger team, there is often runway. We aren't perfect with that and can be better. We will take the feedback here that there is worry about job security and make sure to address that as we talk about new work in the pipeline. As coders and product folks in a consulting firm, we have a lot of control over the success. The better the work we do for the right dollars (time), the more likely we are for our team to grow, increasing stability. The most stressful part is that those same folks play a big role in projects and relationships ending. We are thrilled to have a good reputation with our clients and do work hard to keep it that way. ---------------------------------------- REGARDING TEAM TENURE: Even with team exits and changes -- the tenure of the team currently employed at Caxy is an average of 5 years. Less than 10% have been employed a year a less, 24% 2 years, and 66% have been employed 3 years or more. Turnover requires context. We are very transparent in the details around the exits of employees and communicate each employees positive contributions, the general reason for departure (with privacy preserved), discussions about the impacts, and information about the coverage. Most of the time, terminations happen in isolation, more rarely as a result of projects ending. Most people who are terminated are terminated after weeks or months of attempting to improve performance. More rarely, projects end or incidents occur that are particularly damaging to teams that require immediate termination. As of May 2026, we've lost 0 employees to turnover and have hired 2 in the year. We are also currently hiring 1 more QA to continue supporting the bandwidth of team members. In 2025, we hired 1 person and did see 8 people leave Caxy -- 3 of them to start their own business ventures, 2 because the positions were eliminated, and the remaining 3 for performance results, projects ending, or company direction changes. The start dates of those employees ranged from 2020-2023, which means those folks were employed for 2 years or more, on average. In 2024, we hired 9 people total and saw a departure of 11 people -- 3 to pursue new opportunities and the remaining 8 due to projects ending, performance, positions eliminated, or company direction. We also saw 2 former employees return to Caxy for the 2nd year in a row. In 2023, we hired 17 people and 5 people departed -- 3 for new opportunities. We also saw 2 employees return to Caxy. **note that these numbers don't include the numbers of the few interns or short-term contractors over the last 3-4 years who have planned exit dates from the start of their employment** ---------------------------------------- We would love to connect and understand how we can bridge the gap here of what this feeling is and what we can do -- and where we're limited in just the nature of our business. There is never negative consequence for reaching out about concerns. We also understand there is discomfort doing that.
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