Jeonsoft.. - Software Developer JeonSoft Employee Review

4.0
14 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Good experience specially for web dev. -Collaborative culture where knowledge is shared across all dev teams. -Salary is good if your just single (this year increase is good). -If you got problem on your task, you got reliable and hands-on seniors.

Cons

-3 yrs contract. -Will take 2 or 3 years to increase your job title. -If your tasks are constantly failing and management notices, it will likely pull down your salary increase. -Attendance also is a big factor in yearly increase. -Workload. Always include a buffer in your timeline to accommodate unforeseen urgent concerns. -OT is not paid and converted to SIL. -Some department has outdated techstack (might not be ideal for new developers' career growth).

Explore other reviews about JeonSoft

1.0
18 Jan 2019
Anonymous contractor
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- You'll see great people.

Cons

- Too much stress. - Crowded Office. - Very low salary. - Very low salary increases. - Unpaid Overtime. - So many unnecessary reportings. - Dont have care factor for their employees. - Favoritism. - Dont appreciates their employees. - Dont have trust on their employees. - Will take you for granted. - Papang. - Too many to mention.

11
1.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Established Company Decades of experience in the local payroll and business software market and clear product domain focusing on localized enterprise HR solutions.

Cons

Unstructured Onboarding: New hires face a lack of structured training modules, formal documentation, or clear technical guidelines. Management Culture: Heavy micromanagement and over-the-shoulder monitoring from training staff instead of constructive mentorship. Tense Work Atmosphere: High-pressure environment with poor communication boundaries, creating an unnecessary amount of workplace anxiety for new team members. Defensive Leadership: Internal feedback regarding training friction is met with defensiveness, often rationalizing poor training habits as "normal industry pressure." Strict Contract Constraints: Employment requires signing long-term contract bonds with steep lock-in periods, which creates massive friction given the high-pressure training culture.

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