Great Remote Culture, but Strategic and Staffing Issues Persist - Senior Manager Coalfire Employee Review

2.0
24 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Supportive remote-first culture with flexible work arrangements and solid benefits package.

Cons

Coalfire has a pattern of over-hiring, often bringing on large cohorts of new employees only to conduct layoffs within a few months due to lack of available work. Strategic planning and resource forecasting appear inconsistent, and performance metrics or KPIs are frequently delayed—sometimes not finalized until several months into the new year. The organization is notably top-heavy in certain teams, which can result in management being pulled into consultant-level work, blurring roles and impacting efficiency. Additionally, the rationale behind layoff decisions is often unclear, with some high-performing employees being let go while others with less consistent performance are retained.

Explore other reviews about Coalfire

5.0
5 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Excellent place to work. Company culture is one that seems hard to find elsewhere nowadays. Managers care about their direct reports and not only want them to succeed but actively help them gain experience and develop the skills they need to advance in their career. No expected to work crazy hours beyond standard 40 every week but extra hard work never goes unnoticed

Cons

Could benefit from hiring more support in associate positions and build a strong foundation to promote internally

3.0
24 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Real client-facing technical work in regulated/FedRAMP environments; good exposure if compliance-heavy cloud is your lane. - Internal mobility exists on paper; managers may encourage internal candidates for promotions. - New management clearly understands their assignment and is saying the right things and taking initial steps that appear to be moving us towards a strong path forward.

Cons

- Promotion paths can be unstable; roles may get restructured mid-process, which makes career planning hard. - Management quality is uneven; promotion into management isn't always tied to demonstrated leadership, technical capability, or appropriate vision. - Limited structured professional development. - Compensation progression can be a friction point, including for internal moves. - Bonus payouts have come in far below target even for top performers, which has been rough.

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