Apollo.io reviews

3.7

71% would recommend to a friend

(267 total reviews)
avatar

Tim Zheng

74% approve of CEO

70% positive business outlook

Apollo.io has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 267 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Apollo.io employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

267 reviews
1.0
Oct 24, 2018

Clueless founders

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There were some fun and smart people that worked here.

Cons

Our CEO/founder is incredibly inexperienced. While that can be worked around in some cases, it clearly impacts everything here (sales, marketing, HR, design, product, and engineering). Instead of hiring experienced people allowing them to do their work, he micromanages and makes irrational decisions. He also refuses to actively manage his other co-founders who have the same inexperience. It's painful for anyone who has experience or is good at their job.

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Apollo.io Response
7y
Thank you for your honest feedback. I appreciate you taking the time to share your perspective on Apollo. As you have seen, being a high growth startup means that there is a lot of change along the way. The past year alone, we saw a lot of growth across the business, including people, processes, and strategy. Part of this rapid change is that we sometimes have to figure things out as we go, but building a great company is certainly the main priority. To that extent, our founders have onboarded a very seasoned leadership team, which is already making big strides towards establishing the company in the salestech space. Our CEO, Tim, does not carry decades of experience, but his commitment to excellence, his integrity, humility and his ability to learn, define him more than anything. And he is transforming the whole company with his initiatives for transparency, collaborative decision-making and peer learning (even amongst leadership). You can see all the above in our openly-accessible OKRs for the quarter. I am sorry to hear that you have had a negative experience, but I assure you it is a top company priority to bring excellence to every level of our management team. I am happy to discuss at any point these initiatives and the results you should expect to see and I always welcome your feedback (an anonymous upward feedback survey is planned for this quarter). That said, we can always improve. I’d love to dig in more on your feedback if you’re willing to share. Feel free to email me directly at adonis@apollo.io. Thank you for being candid!
1.0
Jan 10, 2019

No company direction

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great product, office, with great talent still left.

Cons

Leadership makes the same mistakes over and over and has no direction. Employee churn is getting out of hand. Proceed with caution, could be a great team to join once the c-suite is replaced

1.0
Oct 10, 2025

Apollo's product team is currently a snake pit

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company’s remote-first structure offers flexibility, and there are some genuinely talented people who care deeply about doing great work.

Cons

Unfortunately, those employees that care about doing great work are driven away by Apollo’s culture. This is a company driven by fear and chaos. Leadership frequently changes product strategy without transparency or reflection on customer feedback. These shifts are expected to be executed within unrealistic timelines, and it forces teams to redo work, chase moving targets and dismiss insights from actual customers to appease leadership’s orders. This creates chronic burnout, confusion, and a sense that no one is steering the ship with confidence. Progress and positive change feels nearly impossible.
 Communication from product team leadership is often performative. There’s a pattern of selective storytelling — metrics and narratives are shaped to protect certain individuals rather than to reflect truth or drive product improvement. Projects are sometimes shipped without collaboration with key stakeholders because team leads want to fabricate wins or own potential wins independently. This could be to appear more competent, acquire impact as protection or build evidence to drive promotion. Those who speak up or raise concerns are quietly sidelined or let go, which discourages honesty and accountability.
 Many mid-managers are inexperienced and unqualified — promoted because of alignment with leadership preferences rather than demonstrable expertise. Some are in leadership positions simply because they've been with Apollo for years. This often results in leaders who lack the depth to support or develop high-performing talent that Apollo sometimes attracts. Instead of empowering ICs to grow, these managers tend to centralize control and prioritize optics over substance. 
 There’s an undercurrent of insecurity, causing team leads to be more focused on appearing credible than on providing meaningful direction. When mistakes happen, accountability is almost always pushed downward, leaving ICs without adequate support. 
 Some leaders display open disrespect during meetings — interrupting, talking over others, or dismissing contributions in front of the group. Over time, it becomes clear that psychological safety is not a core value. Talented people eventually disengage or leave, not because of the work itself, but because of the environment surrounding it.
 There has also been a revolving door in key leadership roles — Chief Product Officer, among others — which speaks volumes about the company’s instability. This is not a team you want to join if you can avoid it.

Viewing 22 - 24 of 267 Reviews

Glassdoor has 327 Apollo.io reviews submitted anonymously by Apollo.io employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Apollo.io is right for you.