FFTB - Engineer Crypto.com Employee Review

2.0
13 Mar 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Fully work from home at the moment. -Teammates are mostly nice. -If you keep your CRO bonus likely to reap rewards.

Cons

-Retrenchment is sudden and they just lock you out. -Rescinded verbal offer for friend. -Retrenchment of friend who refer you in -No increment despite Singapore raising taxes. -At least 3 times more workload than before. -Removal of crypto card perks -cro bonus pegged to market conditions most colleagues received around half a month or lesser value. -Management trust their own country people more - had a appraisal last year and waste everyone time and decided not to do any increment - can't corelate spending on marketing to increasing traffic, heck even losing to other CEX that spend less.

Explore other reviews about Crypto.com

5.0
29 Jan 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

they have a lot of jobs

Cons

they are one of the best

2.0
19 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work From Home Decent Salary

Cons

In a compliance role, leadership should be willing to listen when analysts/associates raise concerns about regulatory risk, process weaknesses, or policy gaps. In my experience, that was not the culture here. Too often, valid concerns were dismissed instead of taken seriously, even when they involved issues that could affect the firm from a compliance and control perspective. What made the experience especially frustrating was the leadership style within parts of compliance. Rather than encouraging open dialogue, managers came across as defensive, dismissive, and more focused on protecting their own authority than addressing the substance of the issue and creating a toxic environment where raising concerns did not feel safe or productive. Instead of approaching issues in a professional and solution-oriented way, interactions could become personal, degrading, and hostile. This became even more concerning when the NAM compliance department later failed several items in an internal audit, including areas that had already been flagged by analysts as process or policy gaps. That, to me, reflected a broader problem: important concerns were being raised internally, but not handled with the seriousness or humility they required. There was also very little transparency or accountability when it came to employee development, feedback, or career progression. Communication with subordinates was poor, and employees were not given meaningful support or clarity around growth opportunities. HR was equally disappointing. From my perspective, there did not appear to be a reliable or well-structured path for employees to raise concerns and expect a fair resolution. Overall, my experience was that parts of the compliance culture operated more like an insular power structure than a healthy control function. For a company in a heavily regulated space, that is a serious leadership and culture problem.

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