Joke of a company - Associate Software Engineer Navan Employee Review

1.0
12 Oct 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

High Salary in the start

Cons

What fun do you get in playing with people's lives? Why do you hire when you are eventually going to run out of 'budget' or are going to restructure your team alignment and don't need people anymore? Are people's lives a joke to play around with? What is this hire and fire strategy? Your "leadership" isn't at ALL in touch with reality and ground work. People who work get laid off left , right and centre and people who DONT work and are vacation for most part of the year are minting money which is probably why you are going bankrupt. There is a different place in hell for the management of this company who think letting go of people and eventually hiring a new people again is a matter of joke. Once you join the company , you won't be able to get a night of peaceful sleep because you don't know if you will have your job the next day. We meet people and have meetings with our team one day and next day - boom !! Their accesses are revoked and they are gone. That's how it works here. Avoid this company at all costs.

Explore other reviews about Navan

5.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Lots of opportunity for advancement, pay compensation, mentor opportunities, great work environment, diversity and equality.

Cons

notice of sick time usage for it to count as Excused Absence, the ability to trade shifts as all U.S. based workers work Monday thru Friday with the earliest shist starting at 8 am and the latest starting at 12 pm CST

3.0
18 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Competitive compensation and strong benefits package. The coworkers and frontline teams are one of the company’s greatest strengths many are incredibly hardworking, supportive, and committed to helping both customers and teammates succeed.

Cons

Significant operational gaps continue to impact efficiency and employee experience. Reporting systems and workforce planning frequently feel disconnected from the realities of day-to-day operations. Employees and leaders are often expected to be accountable for metrics without reliable reporting or clear guidance on how those metrics are measured. Workload distribution can feel inconsistent, creating an environment where some teams and managers become overextended while others are underutilized. This contributes to burnout, frustration, and a lack of confidence in operational decision-making.

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