Reviews by job title

201 reviews
1.0
26 Mar 2026

Support Operations

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Except few teammates, nothing else

Cons

The current leadership in support operations has significantly impacted team morale and overall effectiveness. There is a consistent lack of clarity, direction, and stability in communication, which creates confusion and prevents teams from operating efficiently. There is also a noticeable absence of recognition and support for employee contributions. This has led to disengagement and a feeling among team members that their work is undervalued. Team dynamics have been negatively affected due to communication approaches that do not foster trust or collaboration. Instead of enabling alignment, they often result in misunderstandings and internal friction. Several key initiatives introduced over the past two years—including changes to team structure, routing models, and operational planning—have not delivered the intended outcomes. Despite this, there has been little visible accountability or course correction. As a result, attrition risk is high, with many employees actively seeking opportunities elsewhere. This is not due to the nature of the work, but primarily due to leadership challenges. There is an urgent need for senior management to reassess leadership effectiveness in this function and take employee feedback seriously. Without meaningful change, the long-term health and stability of the team are at risk.

5.0
26 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Zenoti offers a great platform to learn and grow, especially if you’re early in your career. The work environment is fast-paced and pushes you to improve your skills quickly. The team is generally supportive, and you get exposure to real-world problem solving. There are opportunities to take ownership of tasks and contribute meaningfully to projects.

Cons

Work-life balance can sometimes be challenging, especially during peak delivery periods. Processes may feel unstructured at times, which can lead to confusion or rework. Communication between teams could be improved for better alignment.

5.0
18 Mar 2026

Nice place to work

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The work culture is positive, collaborative, and inclusive, which makes it a comfortable place to grow professionally. The management team is supportive and approachable, always open to feedback and new ideas.

Cons

Some processes could be more streamlined to improve efficiency.

2.0
18 May 2026

AVOID. Leadership failures and bullies ahead.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong product with real market potential in a growing industry. Smart, talented colleagues - particularly at the individual contributor level. Decent compensation depending on level/location

Cons

Leadership terminations in the US are frequent, abrupt, and follow no discernible performance process. In roughly 18 months, the following roles were eliminated — most with no warning, no performance improvement plan, and no transition period: CFO (~1 year) Chief Customer Success (~8 months) CRO (~7 months) SVP Marketing (~1 year 7 months — role hired and fired more than once) VP Growth Marketing (~1 year) VP Demand Gen (~3 months) VP GTM Operations & Enablement (~3 months) Senior Manager, Integrated Campaigns (~8 months) Senior Events Manager (~10 months — role hired and fired more than once) Content Marketing Specialist (~8 months) Social Media Manager (~4 months — role hired and fired more than once) These are not people who left. They were let go — abruptly, and without process. This level of sudden termination makes sustained strategy nearly impossible and results in repeated resets for teams trying to execute long-term plans. Decision-making is highly centralized with the CEO. Pushback or alternative viewpoints are not welcomed, despite what is communicated publicly. The expectation is execution only — not strategic contribution. Psychological safety in meetings is an ongoing issue that HR acknowledges but is unwilling to address at the leadership level. It's also important to understand the operational structure. While the company is often positioned as US-based, nearly 80% of the company is located in India. This shapes decision-making, collaboration expectations, and working dynamics in ways that aren't always transparent during the hiring process. US employees may find the day-to-day reality different from what was described. Marketing specifically is difficult for experienced operators. Strategic ownership is limited, modern marketing disciplines are underfunded and misunderstood, and attribution models are a mess — which minimizes marketing's measured contribution and creates ongoing tension between teams. There is a pattern of forced exits and abrupt terminations, with most tenures lasting under a year - especially across the marketing organization for US-based employees. This is not coincidental. It is the predictable result of an environment where strategic contribution is not tolerated and pushback is not an option. Strategy, time, and people are consistently undervalued. Teams routinely invest months in planning and execution — only to have it dismissed, ridiculed, or scrapped entirely. A recent example that illustrates the broader pattern: 200+ non-India employees across sales, marketing, and customer success were flown to India to align on 2026 GTM strategy — a significant investment during a period of tight budget management. Executives stood on stage presenting company strategy, were called and let go on the spot approx. 3 weeks post event. The result was a rapid reset, leaving employees feeling that substantial time, budget, and personal sacrifice (7+ days away from family and some travel costs) had been invested in work that was immediately discarded. This is not an isolated incident - it's a continuous pattern of abuse, negligence, and narcissism at the highest levels of the company. Leadership communication is also a serious concern. The CEO and co-founder both regularly conduct calls where their cameras are off while employees' cameras are expected to be on, often with multiple people present across the organization. What occurs on these calls is not constructive criticism — it is public ridicule, raised voices, and demeaning language directed at employees (of all levels, not limited to leaders but anyone). When concerns about this mistreatment are raised directly — including explicit requests to not be spoken to that way — employees are told this is simply how leadership communicates and to accept it. HR is aware but it still remains unaddressed. Ask any US-based employees and they will have a story of witnessing verbal torture or enduring it themselves. The impact ripples through the organization. Because this behavior comes from the top and goes unchecked, managers below are left with two choices: mirror it or stay silent to protect themselves. The result is a culture where teams work in silos, leaders are afraid to advocate for their people, and genuine psychological safety does not exist.

5.0
20 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Supportive and collaborative team that makes day-to-day work easier Strong learning and growth opportunities, especially if you take initiative Challenging work with real responsibility, not just routine tasks

Cons

Fast-paced environment, which can be demanding but keeps the work engaging

5.0
22 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pros • High ownership from early on — you're trusted with meaningful work, not just execution • Supportive leadership that values initiative and problem-solving • Fast-paced environment that accelerates learning and growth • Collaborative teams that are approachable and solution-driven • Opportunity to work across functions and build real business impact

Cons

Cons • Pace can get intense during high-priority initiatives • Some internal processes are still evolving as the company scales

5.0
23 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The interview process was smooth, well-organized, and professionally handled with clear communication at every stage. After joining, the onboarding experience has been equally impressive. The process is well-structured, and I received proper guidance and documentation to get started. The team is welcoming and supportive.

Cons

It has only been about a week since I joined, so I haven’t experienced any challenges so far.

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