Passionate team but not a fit for me - Senior RevOps Consultant Go Nimbly Employee Review

3.0
14 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some team members were genuinely passionate and seemed to love what they do. Leadership expressed willingness to let you explore new tools and expand your skills (in theory). Remote environment.

Cons

No onboarding or time to get acclimated. No internal best practices. No playbooks, no standard frameworks for common implementations to save a consultant time vs starting from scratch. The Slack situation was a lot. Constant notifications plus a bot that pings you if you haven't responded to Slack fast enough which made focused work difficult. Emojis everywhere all the time. The culture is intense in a specific way. Heavy on enthusiasm and performative positivity. If that's your thing, great. If you prefer a more grounded environment, it will wear on you quickly. I had concerns about client billing practices that I won't detail here, but contributed to my decision to leave. Base comp below market.

Explore other reviews about Go Nimbly

5.0
23 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company culture is great with a lot of support provided by peers and management. The team generally works hard for each other. The other team members are so smart and genuinely want to help. The clients often have complex problems we can actually help with.

Cons

Clients can be challenging. Sometimes they are sold a vision that we can't do. Internal processes can be messy or unclear, and there is a lot of "we're working on it."

1.0
29 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

* Remote * Exposure to various tech stacks

Cons

In stand ups, serious consultants would explain their work updates. Managers would have a blank stare on their faces, like they had no clue about technology solutions. As soon as the discussion turned to non work related small talk, they would engage with giddy commentary. The TPM regularly had hurt feelings if the team didn't put emojis on Slack posts. We spent an entire meeting hearing her ridiculing the team on not acknowledging her posts with emojis. Meanwhile, the client side was demanding our full attention. A few team members refused to play into this childish game. The next week, their hours were reduced. The issue was raised with partners on how ridiculous it was but it was as if they really enjoyed putting smiley faces on posts too. A founding partner sat there with a straight face and explained why heart emojis were important. Partners would take clients out drinking and come back the next day bragging about how hammered they got. Acting like they were in a college frat instead of providing value through technical solutions. If you are expecting to work for a serious consulting firm, this isn't it. It might work for some, but not for those who have been in the industry a long time. A better fit for fresh graduates looking for feel good company offsites and lots of company slogans, promising grandiose plans that never come to fruition.

3
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