If you have to work here, ask these questions to your potential manager - Senior Software Engineer Applied Intuition Employee Review

1.0
Mar 5, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Most colleagues are hardworking, humble, and helpful people. They make the extremely bad WLB, low pay, brainwash style company culture slightly better.

Cons

Incompetent and inconsistent middle management. They recently hired some experienced manager that are great, but there are certain managers with extremely high attrition. I’ve observed whole team of engineers leaving in under a year due to bad management, and they’ve done nothing to improve. To avoid having to work with bad managers, please make sure you ask: 1. “Are there any engineers that have worked on your team for more than 1 year? I would like to talk to them.” 2. Check their LinkedIn, if they’ve never been a manager before Applied and their team has high attrition, they are most likely a bad manager.

Explore other reviews about Applied Intuition

5.0
Jun 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- high growth opportunity - good business directions - products

Cons

- work hours - intense work environment

3.0
Apr 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Excellent business development strategy. Constant new customers and projects for engineers. If you wanted to run your own startup one day, you could do a lot worse than learn from Applied's strategies. - Fast-pace, challenging work for engineers. Very little abstraction means you touch most parts of the projects you work on. Good learning experiences. - Talented group of engineers to work with (see con about lack of seniority). - No-nonsense culture (at least at the start, see cons).

Cons

- Company has never learned to plan in my years here. Constantly making the mistake of compensating for lack of planning with crunching engineers. Attrition numbers tell the story. - Chasing best available business opportunities has led to its current success. It also means lack of focus and concerningly immature products given their age. - Shockingly does not grow comp with elevation to leadership positions. Lowballs new hires, then expects the existing equity to be enough reason to take on drastically more responsibility and give up technical work. - Great no-bullshit culture (drop BS meetings; technical need leads the way, not politics; avoid partisan politics at work, etc.) is degrading from the top. - New-grad heavy teams. Dearth of senior people to learn from is concerning. Good reason for new grads to move on quickly, or risk building bad habits. - Constantly uses valuation success in funding rounds to justify stunting comp growth. After 1-2 years you understand a truth: the company might be succeeding, but what does that have to do with you? - At some point, you learn enough from the firefighting. But the firefighting does not stop.

9
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All