Don't overstay your welcome - Quality Analyst TikTok Employee Review

3.0
13 Dec 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company provided great benefits, such as gym reimbursement, home office reimbursement during COVID, team building budget, free lunches and snacks every day, Christmas and summer parties (except for this year), travel ticket. Thanks to German law it was also possible to call in sick without a doctor's note on a first day (tho that is on the system, not the company). Last year the annual leave days were raised to 30 vacation days. Some level of employee development structure was in place, although in practice it was a farce.

Cons

Micromanagement, tracking of people (which did not go through in Berlin), team leaders and managers without any background or people skills -- people who used to be regular employees and got promoted without any training or checks if they fit in with the team. Lack of focused business ideas -- in 2024 TikTok laid off people globally in order to streamline business operations and introduce new projects and after lay offs were over said projects were never introduced and plans were changed. "Fast paced environment" of a "start up" is a lie, this is nothing but a mess upon mess. Upon joining 3 years ago I was told people move up quickly and that there were great chances for development and growth. 3 years later I was in the same position without any prospects for anything better or different, because there was no development happening in Berlin.

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2.0
15 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pay is level with industry and actual work is somewhat interesting depending on the team you're on

Cons

In my experience, career growth can feel very limited if you are not part of the dominant internal language and cultural network. A significant amount of important context, communication, and decision-making happens in Chinese, which can make non-Chinese-speaking employees feel excluded from key conversations and promotion opportunities. The environment did not feel as inclusive as it should be for a global company. Advancement often felt less tied to performance and more tied to whether you were connected to the right groups or able to operate fluently within the Chinese-speaking side of the organization. Over time, it felt like non-Chinese-speaking employees had fewer long-term career paths and were at risk of being replaced by people who could better fit that internal operating model. Things also move very slowly because employees are often given access only to the bare minimum needed to do their jobs. There is a heavy push toward using AI tools, but in practice it can make it harder to get help from real people. Instead of getting quick support, you often have to spend time going through AI bots or internal tools before getting a useful answer.

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