Good leadership - Software Engineer Torch Technologies Employee Review

5.0
1 Apr 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The higher up leadership is completely transparent on anything that affects the employees

Cons

They are growing, and there are some growing pains. However, they try to keep the non-management employees from having to be affected. Compensation could be a bit higher in comparison to other companies, but that is made up for with the ESOP.

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Torch Technologies Response
4y
Thank you for the wonderful review! We are glad that in your time with Torch you saw that we value our employee-owners and our customers, and that we care about our employee-owners' success. We really appreciate you taking the time to leave a review, and we appreciate your time as a Torch employee-owner!

Explore other reviews about Torch Technologies

5.0
18 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Have a good ESOP program

Cons

Some contracts are a bit newer

1
1.0
9 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

• I was employed and able to gain my first year of experience. • Coworkers are generally supportive and easy to work with. • Mission work supporting the military can feel meaningful.

Cons

• Salary is not competitive. Compared to what people from my graduating class are earning in similar roles, the compensation here is noticeably lower. The ESOP is often presented as a balancing factor, but for early-career employees it doesn’t meaningfully close the gap in the short term. • Technology stack is behind current industry practices. Many of the tools and development approaches feel dated compared to what is commonly used in modern software environments. That makes it harder to build skills that translate to the broader tech market. • Limited technical leadership. Some managers have not worked as developers or engineers themselves, which makes it difficult to get practical guidance on architecture, tooling, or modern development methodologies. • Professional growth can feel self-directed. Much of the learning happens independently rather than through structured mentorship or technical leadership. • Shutdown policy created frustration. During the government shutdown, employees were not allowed to take unpaid leave and were expected to use PTO or go without pay. For junior employees especially, that policy was difficult to understand. • Contract uncertainty affects morale. With contracts approaching expiration, there can be a lot of uncertainty about future work and career continuity.

7
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