Reviews by job title

32 reviews
2.0
20 Dec 2023

GREAT IC's, TERRIBLE upper management

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Textio has managed to hire some of the best individual contributors. The people you work with all genuinely have your best interest at heart and believe in Textio's mission. - You work from home, and are provided Apple products. - Flexible work hours. No one questions your hours & you're given free reign as long as your work is completed. - Collaborating with other departments is easy & fun. - It's a relaxed-ish environment. - Pay is normal for the market (depending on the state you live in). - The intent behind Textio is truly inspirational. The founders are genuis' and created a product that really helps underrepresented groups feel included. My heart was full while working here knowing that my overall mission was to help the world become a better place.

Cons

- Upper Management(C-level) is truly living in a different universe. They are so wildly out of touch with reality and the lack of market fit for this product. My honest & humble opinion is that the co-founders need to resign. They need to trust in their team & the people they hire to do their job. - There is truly no fit in the market for Loop. Upper Management has also inadvertently made it clear that they no longer care about Loop & are only focusing on using it to generate leads for Lift. - Expectations for the sales & CS teams are WILD. Again, upper management lives in their own world and I truly have no idea where they come up with these numbers. - the sales team has not met their quotas in over a year due to unrealistic expectations. when concerns are presented to leadership their response is basically "Maybe you should work harder." - Upper Management does not practice what they preach. Their social media is always boasting about how to create an inclusive environment, but the company culture is far from inclusive. - Upper Management has clear favorites and only those people are promoted. - Promotions are not given equitably. When positions for management open up, the position is given to whoever the CEO chooses-- rather than being posted on an open forum for people to apply and interview for. Ironic for a company that promotes DEIB.

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Textio Response
2y
Thanks for your time on the team. I disagree with many of the characterizations in your feedback, but the bottom line is that I'm sorry you didn't have a better experience leaving Textio. I will note one thing about our promotion philosophy, because it is important in terms of our values. People at Textio earn promotions, including opportunities to move into management, by way of their on-the-job performance. It's not possible to "interview" for a promotion or a new management position that your day-to-day performance doesn't already make you eligible for. Far from undermining DEI, this is actually a critical pillar of the work; everyone on the team has the chance to shine in their day-to-day delivery, and people who do so are promoted. In fact, I've explicitly shared my guide to getting promoted with the entire company transparently, both in company meeting settings and in writing. And executives use that directly in making promotion decisions. Best of luck finding a great next role.
5.0
27 Jan 2023

DEI culture that is working

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Have you ever wondered what it feels like to work in an organization with a working DEI culture? I joined Textio nine months ago, and it was a fantastic ride. Since I joined the company, it has undergone several repositioning (nature of start-ups) and launched a new product which I think is excellent for the market (the world needs more of this t pe of software, IMO) to help drive transformative and impactful diversity in both recruiting and performance review. People here are super helpful, responsive, and selfless in sharing ideas and chipping in to help. We have five principles that guide us through our day-to-day collaboration - Lead with curiosity, Learn by making, Lean into details, Listen to the loop, and Leave no one behind. It sounds corny on the surface, but everyone chips in, from our executives to individual contributors, to ensure no one is left behind. For me, this is truly one of the few companies that truly live by its principles. And I worked for many companies over the years. The CEO and the executive team are brilliant, hard-working, coming from genuinely diverse backgrounds but most importantly, great listeners (listening to the loop is part of our principle), which is super essential trait in my book. Most of us who have been working for more than a decade seem to be cynical about whether companies can genuinely achieve equity and inclusion in the workplace, as most of my work experience appears to be a workplace version of an El Dorado.

Cons

This is not really a con, but we've gone through changes (no different than any other startups I worked with), weathering the market conditions while launching an innovative product. It is super hard work bringing a product like Textio into the marketplace. If you are looking for a place to come in and cruise along, this is definitely not a place for you. And continuously nurturing and growing an equitable and inclusive culture is not easy. And like all startups, Textio doesn't always get it right; mistakes are made, and we learn as we go. In summary, if you are looking for a place with a clear mission to help drive equity and inclusion in the workplace and are willing to go all in, this place is definitely a Pro.

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Textio Response
3y
Thank you so much for taking the time to leave your feedback. Huge credit to the team around you for creating this experience you’re describing. Thank you for being part of it!
5.0
19 May 2026

Great company culture

Anonymous employee
Recommend
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Business outlook

Pros

Company culture was fantastic! One of the best companies I ever worked for! Felt a strong sense of belonging especially working for a mission driven company and great benefits

Cons

Our head of sales at the time did not give the most clarity or direction to the sales team, (had a tendency to talk in circles) making it hard to know what the ask or direction was at times

1.0
12 Feb 2025

Unstable vision and toxic favoritism culture

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Great health insurance - Good pay

Cons

- Leadership was often passive-aggressive and condescending - The vision for the company changes quarterly - Burn and churn culture (lots of deactivated Slack accounts with no notice) - It's very clear who's in the in-group and if you're not your opinions don't matter

2.0
10 Feb 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Textio is generally a flexible environment where you can set your own schedule. The team is distributed with some in-person meetings which provides a nice balance. You'll likely have some amazing coworkers at the individual contributor level, but managers/leaders can be a different story. That being said, there are definitely some values-driven people who work here. Lastly, solid compensation and unique benefits like stipends for wellness. If you are on a good team, the pay and benefits are probably enough to keep you here for a couple of years.

Cons

Speaking from my experience alone, leadership is absent frequently and resurfaces at unpredictable points shifting the team's focus without warning or thoughtful strategies in place. There is extremely poor internal communication. Decisions are often made unilaterally, reactively, and from the top down. As a result, there's a lot of chaos, stress, and lower-quality work output.   Managers I've reported to are very undertrained and rarely give constructive feedback, recognition, or credit. The ones I've reported to lack basic people management experience and haven't consistently demonstrated behaviors like empathy, curiosity, and collaboration. In my department, there's a bit of a mentality of "everyone for themselves." We don't work together on goals, and as a result, everyone is running in different directions at high speeds.   There is definitely a lack of safety and the ability to show up openly. You have to be very careful about the perspectives you share and the questions you ask. To survive, self-censorship and staying out of visible sight is crucial. That's the part that has been hardest for me: feeling like I am not allowed to ask questions, push back, or surface concerns in the open.   Maybe some of that comes from the strong cultural pressure at Textio to always come across as positive. This cultural expectation can make it hard to speak out or share ideas without undergoing cycles of blame and judgment downwards. Several leaders expect you to come to them with solutions, not problems so problems never make it to them.    Certain voices go perpetually unheard at Texito. There's definitely favoritism and cliquiness, usually for those who have been at Textio for many years. Sometimes as a new person, you won't have a voice at the table even if you have useful experience to contribute. I'm often left wondering at the end of rough days why the company hires people they don't seem to trust and won't listen to. While not everyone at Textio feels this way and I want to be careful not to overgeneralize, there is definitely a significant percentage who do. It would be worth investigating culture issues and providing channels for Textios to surface their concerns if the company hopes to reduce the current amount of attrition.  There are not many standardized processes and it's really hard to get answers when you have questions. It can feel like an act of bravery to just post a question or thought in Slack. I've never felt that way anywhere else I've worked. It makes me grateful for past companies, and I did not know what a luxury it was to simply be allowed to speak up without fear or risk. My experience at Textio has been really hard. It's taken a hit on my self-esteem and mental health. I really couldn't have been more surprised since I was a huge fan of the company when joining. I fully expected that I had landed my dream job. I wish I could work on a different team here because there are some good things, but I know I can't sustain the current experience I am having long-term. Who knows? They could figure it out one day, but my advice is to come into this company skeptically so you don't find yourself on a bad team with a manager who won't hesitate to throw you under the bus. 

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Textio Response
3y
Thanks for leaving your feedback. It sounds like your experience has been decidedly mixed. The organization has been through significant leadership change in the last 18 months, and I agree that we’ve had to make significant investments in training managers (especially newer ones) as the team has upleveled. In a prior version of this review that I believe you’d left, I noted that you worked on the business side of the organization, and my above observations are especially true there. It’s an interesting comment that some newer Textios have had a harder time than others finding their footing. I’m curious if there are patterns you’ve noticed as to who reaches solid ground fastest. For my part, I’ve observed that about 3/4 of newer Textios have found their comfort zone within their first few months, but I agree it’s not everyone and we have some work to do to calibrate our hiring criteria. Best wishes on your next adventure, and thank you again for the feedback.
4.0
17 Feb 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Gets DEIB right at a company level - Leftist product and culture - Financially responsible

Cons

- The product positioning lends to a tech stack that under utilizes backend engineers - Product areas and services become deprecated on a semi regular basis (Umeo being the headline example here) - Public conversations tend to be fragile / sterile, you get the impression that everyone is trying to wear their "Everything Is Great Here!" mask

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Textio Response
3y
Thanks for leaving your feedback and for the thoughtful balance within it. Fwiw, I think our performance management product is going to require significant technical innovation on the back end, especially because of the huge potential user scale—for every individual recruiter in a large organization, there are hundreds or even thousands of people writing feedback. Time will tell of course but I’d be very surprised if we won’t have to innovate. I know what you’re saying about public conversations. The most useful discussions I have in small groups are the constructive ones, and I think we have work to do to systematize and normalize how have these discussions more broadly. We are far ahead of where we were a few years ago, but also have a ways to go, especially on the systematicization. I appreciate you leaving your feedback and your observation of the workplace we are trying to create wrt DEI. Thank you for being part of Textio! Kieran
2.0
28 Sept 2024

Favoritism and Toxicity

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The motivation and intent behind the products inspires people.

Cons

Toxic feedback culture (based on “radical candor”) where people get unhelpful (verbal) personality feedback which the company product was built to prevent, due to a combination of “mean girl” culture and lack of training for leadership.

2.0
14 Feb 2024

Great concept, difficult market

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Textio takes its DEI mission very seriously -Some very talented and committed colleagues -pay isn’t bad -solid bennies -interesting origin story

Cons

-multiple cycles of PiPd sales employees taking blame for poor product dev and disintegrating market = cynical leadership focused on self preservation versus truth -extremely top heavy, lots of chefs, lots of talking and thinking, not much action -CHATGTP has crushed companies like this with a better product = it probably won’t last long -ironically infested with both a toxic positivity culture and a blame culture simultaneously . Not a lot of responsibility taken at the top, unfortunately

4.0
10 May 2024

Good benefits

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Culture is good, and there is an effort to treat employees well.

Cons

Lots of behind the scene changes constantly, making it hard to keep up.

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Glassdoor has 65 Textio reviews submitted anonymously by Textio employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Textio is right for you.