Apptricity reviews

2.6

37% would recommend to a friend

(115 total reviews)

Timothy D Garcia

28% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

Apptricity has an employee rating of 2.6 out of 5 stars, based on 115 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Apptricity employee rating is 32% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

115 reviews
1.0
Dec 30, 2014

Think about it

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Apparently they have enough money from the settlement to last a couple more years.

Cons

Really are to numerous to mention. My advice to those seeking employment is to think logically when looking at the reviews. Do you find it a bit odd that there are either majorly positive reviews or incredibly negative reviews that combine for an overall mediocre rating? I for one, don't like mediocrity, not to mention toxicity.

1.0
Mar 9, 2014

I need to get out of here.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Daily game of "who is going to get yelled at by Tim today?"

Cons

No room for advancement. Professional Services is a nightmare. Not sure why the clients stay. Salary employees have to turn in weekly time sheets and the hours better exceed 40. Comp time is a dirty word.

1.0
Jun 18, 2013

Most dysfunctional, employee-hostile environment I've ever worked in

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are a lot of good, friendly people that work there below the executive level.

Cons

Management has zero respect for its employees. They invest nothing in them, consistently fail to put them in position to be successful, and have no idea how to motivate or bring out the best in people. Motivation consists solely of screaming and threatening jobs. The company offers no training program or education compensation, no formal review process, and pay raises are few and far between, which is particularly problematic since Apptricity pays well below DFW market value for all positions. Employees are "rewarded" for good performance by being given more work and responsibility, without an accompanying bump in pay. Employee morale is extremely low. New employees come in enthusiastic and have it beaten out of them within a couple of weeks by the executives' overbearing management tactics and the general dysfunction of the workplace environment. Consistently, about two-thirds of the employees are looking for work elsewhere at any given time. While Apptricity has about 100 employees at current, about twice that many have quit or been fired over the last three years. That's a truly staggering rate of attrition. While workplace processes have become more organized over the last year, the development process is still largely a cluster. Fire drills are common due to poor planning by executives and their propensity to over-promise, and thus under-deliver to customers. Deadlines are usually pulled out of thin air and have little relation to how much work or effort is actually required to develop a product. Scope creep without an accompanying adjustment of timetables/deliverable dates is common, which results in "why isn't this project on schedule" rants from executives, followed by employees working huge amounts of unrewarded overtime. Schedules also often drift off track because the CEO or other execs pull resources off of priority projects to work on their own pet projects or fire drills. The general approach to product development at Apptricity is when choosing between doing it right and doing it fast, doing it fast always wins. There is little real communication between departments, as department heads tend to horde as much information as possible in order to enhance their position and their group's standing at the expense of other departments. It's not uncommon for two executives to give conflicting sets of instructions to employees, with neither exec knowing that this is the case. This usually results in employees being screamed at, having their competency called into question, or fired simply because they didn't know which set of instructions to follow, or worse, dared to ask for clarification. This creates an environment where employees go out of their way not to ask questions or stick their necks out, for fear that they will have their heads chopped off for doing so. Group managers are managers in name only. They are often given no title to convey to anyone outside of their group that they are in charge, are given no real authority or responsibility, but are held accountable as if they have.

Viewing 46 - 48 of 115 Reviews

Glassdoor has 116 Apptricity reviews submitted anonymously by Apptricity employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Apptricity is right for you.