Accounting Department is a mess - Anonymous employee RealPage Employee Review

2.0
15 Apr 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fitness focused Great cafeteria

Cons

The new Chief Accounting Officer came in and really reduced everyone's morale. Hardly any work life balance and everything is manual. The CAO has her favorites and only values their opinion. Lot of senior management in finance, revenue management, and accounting has left. There is no diversity in the upper management. No focus on career growth and employees are not paid fairly. Better chances of getting paid higher if you leave and come back.

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RealPage Response
7y
Thank you for your post. We appreciate you pointing out some great facilities benefits, but your post is really about the accounting department culture. Your advice is very sound for any function and it will be shared with the Financial leadership team. It would not be accurate to say that there is no diversity in upper management in the Finance Department as 3/6 SVPs are women. Wishing you the best in your future endeavors. Sincerely, Kurt Twining

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Pros

Team work and collaboration is key within our team.

Cons

The job is fast pace which I like but I know some find it hard to keep up.

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RealPage Response
1w
Thank you for sharing your experience! It's wonderful to hear that teamwork and collaboration are thriving within your team—those are values we truly cherish. We also appreciate your perspective on the fast-paced environment. While we know it's not for everyone, it's great to hear that you find it energizing. We're grateful to have team members like you who embrace the pace and contribute to a strong, collaborative culture. Thank you for being part of the team!
1.0
26 Jun 2026
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CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good engineering tooling. Talented engineers and teammates. Flexible remote work.

Cons

I ran one of RealPage's larger engineering product teams for three years, hiring and developing more than half of the engineering managers and engineers on my organization. I believed I was building something that mattered. Instead of promoting the person already doing the work, leadership hired a lateral engineering manager alongside me. Over time, responsibility stayed with me while authority and support shifted elsewhere. I became the person expected to absorb every problem. My first manager used me to fill every gap instead of developing me. I was expected to handle support, incident response, production releases, coding, architecture, project management, and people management—all at the same time. My second manager sidelined me, criticized me, and focused on replacing me instead of developing me. I was once told I was "lucky to be useful, or I wouldn't still be here." That statement summed up the culture. Leadership expected constant availability while frequently being unavailable themselves. When leadership was out, I was expected to cover. I spent over a year supporting both U.S. and India time zones, making true time off nearly impossible. RealPage has incredibly talented people, but talented employees cannot overcome a culture where managers are consumed instead of developed. I loved building teams. I just wish the company had valued the people who built them.

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