Not recommended for Engineering - Engineer Balbix Employee Review

1.0
15 Jul 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pay could be decent, if you negotiate well. Work -Life balance.

Cons

They took 8+ years (they talk about rewrites but it is mostly the same stuff dressed up in new form) to build something a team of 5 can build in under 6 months and maybe with AI assisted coding even faster. To add to this, what they have built breaks often and the only way it scales is by paying huge bills to cloud providers. Pedigree is preferred over real expertise. The core issue with Engineering is that the CTO ( a nice guy and the most hardworking person you will ever meet) blindly trusts 2 senior folks. These guys have ensured job security and basically kicked out anyone who has tried to change things or was more competent than them. Most engineering teams do not have a self contained dev environment. Engineering is elementary at best. You are in perennial POC mode and push what 'ends up' working first in demo to prod. Just very very sad. DevOps & Product Management, it is even worse than engineering. Maybe they should just hire interns and I'm sure they would do a better job. Sales ( from my outside view ) is the only reason this company has survived for so long, credit where it is due. But most good folks left. No access to the CEO so can't comment about him. I had a chat with him as part of my interviews and that is it never after that.

Explore other reviews about Balbix

5.0
3 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- I was very lucky to have an excellent management chain, as my direct manager and all skip-level superiors were accessible, responded to feedback, and tried to help me whenever they could. I understand that not everyone had this experience, but I did. - I learned a lot, and am a far better engineer at the end of my tenure than at the start of it. I learned to develop ownership of the things that I built, along with extensive domain knowledge. - A lot of people complained about work-life balance, and it did get significantly worse in 2024-25, but I actually felt as if I was able to take time for myself. Again likely a function of quality of manager(s), but they were very respectful of my health. - Amazing engineering team. This is a deeply talented group of people who know their systems inside out, and truly own the things that they are building. I referred a friend here who got selected, and we both enjoyed our time here. - Zero office politics. There was minimal drama in the team, personalities gelled very well, and many people developed strong, lasting friendships that extended to well outside the office. Merit governed performance assessment, not connections or games.

Cons

- Marketing, Sales, and Product was a joke, full stop. And it's the reason the company went under. The revolving door of CROs & Heads of Sales, each promising the moon, never delivering, wore out the engineering team, with demands for transparency going unanswered. I frankly don't think most of the SEs and sales teams ever understood what made our product stand out, didn't sell it well, and tanked the company. - There was so little bandwidth in product that engineers doubled as PMs, trying to understand customer needs without any access to actual customers. This is fundamentally the fault of the SDLC at Balbix: the CTO (honestly, too good at his job) became the point-of-contact for customer-facing and internal-facing roles, coordinating everything. I mean, literally everything. And he sure is plenty smart enough to do that, but his time is limited - which chokes feature development, and cuts off access to real customer feedback. - Many people felt gaslit by leadership by acquisition time. Internal revenue figures were flatly false, we were told that we were on a solid footing, and that was all clearly a lie. The acquiring company is a candidate for the most toxic workplace on planet earth, and leadership failed to protect its best asset - its developers - from that carnage. There is a lot of resentment for that. - Pay was low. This didn't bother me for most of my time, because I enjoyed my team and liked what I was working on, but it stung more when we realized how badly we were being gaslit about our company finances.

2.0
24 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible time off for personal balance

Cons

Extremely toxic work environment and micromanagement

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