N26 reviews

3.5

56% would recommend to a friend

(701 total reviews)
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Valentin Stalf

28% approve of CEO

39% positive business outlook

N26 has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 701 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The N26 employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finanzen industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

701 reviews
2.0
Aug 17, 2020

Bad leadership

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You're challenged on a daily basis, you learn a lot, and there are good people around you.

Cons

The cons have already been stated in reviews.

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N26 Response
5y
Thanks for your review. It’s great to hear that you’re being challenged in your role, and learning lots along the way. As N26 continues to grow, we believe these opportunities for personal growth are both crucial to our success, and an equally important part of your career journey with us. Please get in touch with the Employee Experience team if you have any other feedback to share about your experience working with us.
1.0
Aug 16, 2020

Stay away

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Getting Stuff Done Days, which are meeting free hackathons to build new and shiny things - Development Budget (€1.5k), which you are free to spend for conferences, trainings and other things aaand that's about it, the rest they have cut under the mantra of "cost savings", while we're still raising tons of investor money to pursue their DJ career.

Cons

The product org is the biggest joke I've seen in my entire career. Everything has OKRs and KPIs, none of them match the current company direction. If you don't hit these numbers, nothing will happen: no accountability whatsoever. Several initatives even go into the opposite direction of their KPIs, but if you think that stops anybody from continuing them - you're wrong, some people even get a promotion for that performance. As a result everybody just does the bare minimum of changing colors, merging buttons, adding icons or somehow changing layouts that a poor UX person can put it on their CV for their upwork profile. Nobody, starting from the CEO and the CPO has a clue what to do with the product. One day we want to do multi-banking and multi-accounting, the other day trading and savings, tomorrow crypto and insurances. In the end we just want to play catch-up with Revolut, which we are behind half a decade in feature development. We have the highest product to tech people ratio in the industry, yet nothing they can come up with is in the slightest sense innovative or ground breakingly unique as a differentiator. Even the app from Sparkasse has more features than N26 and delivers more per quarter. If you look at the background of our product people, several of them actually come from customer service from some kind of career progression path. Because chatting with people over a coffee is really all qualification you need for you to do product management here. The result is that they make the funniest and most ridiculous decisions - mostly driven by the product director bros that have not the slightest clue of what it takes to be a director but always give you a cool bro excuse on why the don't do the thing that makes the most sense. A common excuse PMs bring is that they are being micro managed by Valentin, especially here on glassdoor, but the reality is that they just really suck as product managers. Frequently you find PMs going to conferences to talk about the bleeding edge sh*t they don't do at work in order for them to secure their next gig at some other startup. Compliance is a total joke department, the first thing they introduce is waterfall software development so some banking operation dude with no technical background (probably originating from customer service) can micro-manage every line of code that's being released to production. Apparently it reduces risk when you can't ship anything anymore. Instead of fixing real compliance issues, they focus on writing 40 page processes that nobody can ever adhere to, implement or inspect. Security is a total cr*p show, the best security people they have are some kids with an AWS certification on how to define a VPC with security groups and due to that are super arrogant. Similar to Compliance they want to review code and "security test" every little piece of code MANUALLY before it goes into production (yes, you have to wait three weeks for them to look at it, plus another to test before you can release). The best they can find is that your JSON parser throws exceptions when it's getting malformed input - thanks for wasting everybodies time without any added security to the product. AML (the department that should fight fraudsters and money laundering and such) is a lead by a recent grad that apparently wrote a couple of sentences in his master thesis about it. Feedback culture is, after the PM org, the second biggest joke here. Everybody needs to constantly gather feedback from random people to improve themselves or get a promotion. In reality, you obviously ask your best friends to give you good feedback and then half of the company spends at least six weeks in calibration sessions, reading out loud what your friend has given you for a feedback and how that compares to that other dude that got feedback from his friends. Then in some elusive round of important people, they decide based on your name and your friends feedback whether to give you nothing, a 0.5% raise or a promotion with no salary increase ("acting" they call it). To top if off, there are constantly engagement surveys going around to make sure everybody is happy. If you wonder whether there is any change coming out of these surveys? Nope. They completely stopped after the last time, where they gave away free chocolate during Christmas to show that they care about you as an employee. Instead every team now has to come up with a set of actions on how to improve things. As you can imagine, the number one complaint is that our C level completely sucks - which obviously doesn't get fixed - as well as the other things you complain about. Feedback culture at N26 is completely broken and a waste of everybodies time. If you read other reviews, maybe you have read about Kurzarbeit (furlough). Effectively it was a huge layoff program of several hundred people. Anyone sent off was already circulating in low performer lists for a couple of weeks before the decision was made official. The crisis was apparently the right time and trigger to scam the German social security fund for some social security money to send these people off for an infinite vacation. If you read it while you're on KA, you are definitely not coming back ever: find a new job ASAP. Fret not, all the money we're saving and raising due to that is spent every month in a six digit marketing budget, excluding the enormous salary that the new Marketing Director from Uber gets from doing nothing all day. Since the crisis all hiring is frozen, yet people leave in masses. There is not a single week going by without a "goodbye" email. This happens in waves, so every year you can count on the full company to completely replace itself: you rarely find anyone working here for longer than a couple of months. The obvious result is that we have to promote inexperienced people into roles they are no fit for, again causing more people to leave. On top of the usual half-a-year re-org attempt to fix the broken matrix organization, we constantly have to merge teams to keep them somehow functional. Oh right, if you think that would cut the workload somehow, reprioritize initiatives or extend the timeline expectations? Not at all, Valentin will personally blame you and your team for not delivering. Due to that chaos, it's absolutely impossible to do changes that are bigger than changing the color of a button or a adding some logos. All big projects (which for granted have great project managers) fail or get cancelled half-way through because nobody is capable to deliver them. Everybody involved in the process feels entitled enough to say "no" to anything, starting from PMs that see their OKRs at risk, armchair architects whose sole education comes from Martin Fowler blogs (no wonder, half of the company is actually working at Thoughtworks or worked there in the past), low-light tech leads that don't want to do additional work and then the usual compliance and security people that want you to not change a single thing ever. The bias for inaction really sucks the lifeblood out of everybody and makes people refrain from doing anything that improves things. Working from home is a constant topic that comes back up every week and in every Q&A session. Apparently everybody becomes more innovative when they sit together in meetings instead of using Hangouts, at least that's the latest narrative that Valentin and Max want you to believe. I'm always wondering how they have so much time to micromanage everybody back into the office when they could also tackle real problems of their company. Looking at the recent history before everybody had to work from home, I have a hard time to understand how anybody at this company is innovative in the slightest sense. In the past, this caused the whole building to be out of meeting rooms all the time. To top if off, they were so concerned about the health and safety that they filed restraining orders against their own employees (!) to make sure they can't vote for an electoral board of a works council. The whole communication and reasoning around it is beyond doubt the most ridiculous narrative I've seen in my entire life. Thankfully the press covered it properly, so stay away from such a company and I can only hope that everybody working here is leaving as soon as possible.

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N26 Response
5y
It’s unfortunate for us to hear that you’ve not had a positive experience at N26. Given your 3+ years tenure with us, and our fast growth in recent years, understandably the company will look much different now from when you joined, and we realize there will have been growing pains along the way. We would like to take this opportunity to respond to your concerns and feedback. You mention feeling frustrated by compliance and regulatory topics which may have inevitably slowed down aspects of your work. We recognize that this transition in the way we work could be difficult for some, but we do see this is a natural part of scaling up from our start up roots. And while there are certainly more processes, and projects may take longer to complete, we would have to disagree with your statement that this is a waste of time. As a bank, security will always be a top priority for us. We give major kudos here to our brilliant teams who work tirelessly on critical security, compliance and regulatory topics. You have also shared frustrations of employees being promoted from other departments, and growing into new roles. We believe that internal mobility can be an extremely important part of an employee’s professional development at N26. That said, it’s important to point out that our internal mobility is facilitated through a structured recruiting process - the same approach we take with external candidates - and an equal assessment of qualifications is applied. The decision to ask some of our team members to participate in Germany’s short-work program, Kurzarbeit, was not one that was made lightly. Business criticality was the number one priority when looking at work and roles to prioritise, and only those in roles where the workload had a major impact, given the current situation with COVID-19, have been asked to adjust their working time. We have also offered a voluntary option for other team members to participate, such as those with children, where their preference would be to reduce their working hours at this time. As the year has progressed and the situation has improved, we have been pleased to welcome team members back to full-time work. Feedback is an important part of an individual’s personal development, and something which we rely on during our promotion cycles. We ask employees to obtain feedback from their key stakeholders in the business, which is then compiled in a promotion pack and reviewed to determine promotion readiness decisions. Our Employee Experience team also offers trainings on giving and receiving feedback. If you have any questions or concerns about our approach to feedback, and how we leverage this for professional development, we would be happy to discuss this with you. We appreciate you raising your concerns and sharing your experience with us. Our leadership team plays an active role in reviewing all Glassdoor reviews, and we will ensure your feedback is received. You can also get in touch with the leadership team directly to discuss your feedback and ideas for improvement, or through the Employee Experience team member for your area. Thank you.
3.0
Aug 15, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good enough salary, above minimum wage. Modern IT environment. Some good extra perks like free food and some parties. A lot of colleagues from many different countries. A sport club with running and cycling activities. The office is conveniently located.

Cons

Very toxic environment. No voice to employees and those who raise their voice (or try to suggest something different) have been fired. Customer service organization is chaotic and in need of restructuring. Promotions in CS are handled almost randomly: sometimes the ones with better stats and results have to wait months if not years to move up the ladder, while some "lucky ones " get promoted in a couple of months for no reason. The majority of the TLs is just trying to create teams with people they can easily manage. They will support you as long as it is convenient for them and their own career. No support and poor management of autistic spectrum employees.

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N26 Response
5y
Hi. Appreciate you sharing your experience with us. We love that we have the opportunity to work with colleagues from over 80 nationalities, as this almost always leads to lots of interesting new connections, conversations and perspectives. It’s also great to hear that you enjoyed our perks and benefits, and got to experience some of the epic N26 parties in pre-COVID times. As a growing organization, we realize there are opportunities for improvement, so your constructive feedback is much appreciated. We run a structured promotion cycle twice per year, which is designed to be fully transparent in how promotion decisions are made. When an employee feels they have built up the necessary skills and are ready to develop into the next level, we use the feedback from their stakeholders in the business to determine their promotion readiness. As of our most recent promotion cycle, in September 2020, we celebrated the promotions of 154 employees, which was a great testament to the achievements and personal development of our employees across N26. We’re really glad you were a part of the N26 journey, and contributed to getting us to where we are today. Thanks again for your feedback.
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Glassdoor has 1,002 N26 reviews submitted anonymously by N26 employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if N26 is right for you.