Toxic, Disorganized Mess - STAY AWAY - Anonymous employee Kong Employee Review

1.0
17 Oct 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Just meeting the 5-word minimum here.

Cons

Back-stabbing, politicking, general disorganization, dysfunction and an overall lack of trust is rampant across most teams. No clear direction on platform enhancements and product releases. Little to no enablement for employees outside of a dozen or so poor-quality training videos filmed with an iPhone or webcam. Sales leadership for North America is a train wreck, an utter disaster. The recent removal of the incompetent, narcissistic, toxic presence that had no business being in a leadership role, and everyone (sans leadership) knew it. Sales teams, following their leaders, are the first to point a finger at various support teams when deals go south, never taking ownership or responsibility for their own shortcomings and deficiencies. As a result, sales reps rarely earns the trust of prospective customers yet continually deflect blame across other support teams, while never being remotely in the stratosphere of hitting a quarterly number. However, if you can put together a pretty powerpoint for QBRs loaded with unattainable numbers and say "bullish about next quarter" every other sentence, management will look the other way as it relates to your multitude of deficiencies as a manager and you're golden. The corresponding attrition rate for employees on this team (and across the company, which now qualifies for "rats fleeing the ship" territory) is a direct result of leadership not demonstrating that it has the discipline or mettle to make immediate, widespread changes to sales and sales leadership to reverse course. Despite what is promised during the recruitment process or posted on the company website, you'll quickly learn that there are "Rules For Thee But Not For We" such as "Unlimited" PTO and "Unplug" Weekends, for example, where you'll find people Slacking and texting you as frantically as if it was the final hours of quarter-end, where the financial goal is nowhere in sight (which it usually isn't). The newly-added "Core Value" OWN IT is a joke. For many employees, and without question enterprise sales in the US, what OWN IT actually means when deals are hard (which is always), when deals push (which is frequent) and when deals are lost (which is often) is this: point fingers, deflect blame, and look for victims. When you find an unsuspecting victim, gaslight everyone. Never assess what you can do better or differently. Question how everyone other than yourself is doing their jobs. Introspection and looking for how the team can come together to improve are afterthoughts, at best. Rinse, repeat. There is a cancer at Kong. And it's killing this company.

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Kong Response
3y
Hello - I’m sorry that your short experience with Kong was not a positive one. That is a failure and one I take seriously. While we're a distributed global company, obviously, people perceive things mainly based on their specific functions and geos. Overall, culture and values are key to Kong. We continue to make hard decisions, including leadership changes. We are not perfect and direct feedback has fueled our growth as one of the main reasons for our company eNPS score being at 43, (78% + global participation), which is well above the benchmark of similar-sized companies. We continue to work on our values and our leadership principles and invest in programs that promote leadership development. It’s definitely a journey and not a destination. You’ve heard us talking a lot about the start-up journey and that it is not suited for everyone. As we continue to grow (with growing pains), some may not be able to adapt to the new challenges of scaling a company. This includes results and how those are achieved, and when they are subpar, we do make changes. We are a learning company, so this feedback is much appreciated. I just wish you had come forward first to speak up on the outlined topics. I believe our conversation would have been a good one and possibly shed some light and factual data on your opinions. Of course, Im always open to talking anytime. Thank you for your time as a Konger. I wish you peace and success in all of your future endeavors.

Explore other reviews about Kong

5.0
1 Jul 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

High earning potential. Product dominates in most competitive scenarios and stands out on the Gartner report at the very top right and leading the API space with the greatest vision. A testament to the CEO's ability to read into the way the market is moving based on his decades of experience and keeping up with customer demands going into the agentic era. Lucky to work here. The best and brightest in API & AI gateways are here. The pre-IPO excitement vibe is real here. Good coverage from an AE to SE standpoint (2:1). Easily able to communicate across the business to get help/answers to solving hard problems with colleagues more than happy to help.

Cons

Scaling into an IPO means things are moving fast so not a con per se but keeping up with small competitors, who are popping up quickly (but also leave the market quickly) as well up has its demands as clients are looking everywhere right now to survive and win in this agentic era.

5.0
18 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The thing that stands out most at Kong is the people. This is genuinely one of the most talented, driven, and collaborative groups I've worked with — and that's not just within my immediate team. Kong has built a truly global team, and the diversity of perspective and experience you get from that is something you can feel in day-to-day work. The product speaks for itself. Kong is solving real, complex problems in the AI connectivity space, and there's a shared sense of purpose around what we're building. It's the kind of place where you actually believe in what you're selling, which makes a big difference. Culture is something a lot of companies talk about but few actually invest in. Kong's COURAGE core values aren't just words on a wall — they come up in real conversations and shape how decisions get made. Leadership is visible, engaged, and genuinely cares about the team.

Cons

Like any high-growth tech company, the pace is fast and there's always more work to do than hours in the day. If you thrive in ambiguity and like to move quickly, that's energizing — but it can be a lot if you're looking for a slow and steady environment.

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