High Performers Will Love it Here - Work Hard & Get Rewarded - Engineering Manager ClickUp Employee Review

5.0
10 Mar 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- I've worked at ClickUp for 3 years now. In this time I have had 3 titles Senior Engineer -> Staff Engineer -> Engineering Manager. Of all the places I have worked I can say this is the first place where high performers are appreciated and rewarded appropriately. - Lots of challenging technical + customer specific use cases. I can say I have grown more as an engineer due to how complex of an platform ClickUp is. - Lots of ownership. If you want to have impact you are very much so enabled to do so. - Talent pool is very deep. Some of the best engineers I have worked with have been at ClickUp. - Always improving around engineering and businesses processes. - Remote first environment and culture is over all fantastic.

Cons

- Low performers or those looking to skate by well not thrive in this environment. - ClickUp is an ever changing environment. If data changes that might change our direction and need some flexibility. Likely will get pulled in multiple directions and need the ability to juggle that. - Very hands on from upper management. Expect to have feedback from CEO level down. I personally like this passion, but to some would be a con.

Explore other reviews about ClickUp

5.0
23 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Lots of opportunity to affect change. Solid product.

Cons

Typical industry problems, no unique cons.

2.0
18 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some smart, ambitious people who you can learn a lot from.

Cons

This place is an unstable, toxic mess, and leadership is largely to blame. The C-suite is full of egos and seems to make goals and quotas up out of thin air, then cleans up the fallout from poor planning and overhiring with layoffs. There have been three company-wide mass layoffs in less than four years, and that doesn’t even include the many layoffs that have happened quietly behind closed doors. The toxicity at the top trickles down through the entire organization. VPs put pressure on middle management, who then pass that pressure on to ICs. The company can’t seem to keep leaders in place for more than six months, which creates constant chaos and confusion. Strategies are always changing, priorities shift every few months, and nothing ever sticks long enough to make a real impact. Promotions seem to be based more on politics, favoritism, and who can make the most noise than on actual performance. The same people get promoted year after year, and many of them seem underqualified for the titles they hold. If you’re good at self-promotion and have the right relationships, you’ll probably do fine. If you’re quietly doing great work, don’t expect the same recognition. HR keeps saying they’re working on improving the promotion process, but I haven’t seen much change. If you’re considering joining the GTM org (especially the operational side) I would think twice. The new leadership loves to talk about transformation, improvements, and exciting changes, but there’s usually very little follow through behind the messaging.

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