CapTech reviews

3.8

64% would recommend to a friend

(467 total reviews)
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Andy Sofish

62% approve of CEO

47% positive business outlook

CapTech has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 467 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The CapTech 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

467 reviews
1.0
Feb 4, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Staff augmentation shop so the work is easy - Some nice people in the lower levels of the company - It could be a better company if there was better local office leadership

Cons

- Staff augmentation, so don't expect to use skills you have or learn new ones - Toxic culture, bullying, and retaliation driven by immature and insecure leadership - Low compensation compared to competitors with expensive benefits - Not prepared at all for COVID, so they furloughed and laid off most staff while leadership not only stayed but also took no pay cuts

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CapTech Response
5y
We appreciate that you took the time to write a review and are sorry to hear about your experience and departure from CapTech. What you describe is not what we wish for any CapTecher. Hopefully, you reached out to your HR Rep, or our Ethics Hotline while you were here, as the environment you reference is unacceptable here at CapTech and would activate further investigation. Regarding COVID, as many others will attest, throughout 2020 sacrifices were made across all of CapTech, including our leadership, in order to weather the economic storm with minimal impact to our CapTechers, and provide support throughout these tough times. I hope this at least clarifies any misperceptions you had. –Katy Apostolides, HR Director
1.0
Aug 5, 2020

Room for improvement

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great happy hours, sexy office space.

Cons

The Space The space is SEXY - corporate high rise, big windows, beer on tap, fancy coffee machines, modern decor.. an absolute wow factor for interviews, happy hours, socializing, and even hosting external events to showcase how trendy and cool the office is, but not built for functionality for those coming to the office to work. With far too few seats, you can often find people sitting in chairs in the lobby and at lunch tables trying to take calls in overly packed common spaces. Who wants to lead a client call next to someone eating a tuna sandwich and 2 college hires talking about their weekend pool parties? Even for the group of practitioners lucky enough to land a desk (new hires are pretty low in the pecking order so don’t expect to have a seat anytime soon), the “open concept” makes it impossible to focus, much less take a client call. If CapTechers are encouraged to be present (in non-COVID times), at least make sure there is somewhere reasonable to accommodate proper working conditions. With not having a desk or opting to work from home, it is easy to fall through the cracks come review time when leadership doesn’t recognize you. Salary/Benefits The salary is very competitive for those starting their careers, but once you are in the door the upward trajectory for career growth and salary increase hardly keeps up with inflation rates. The same small handful of employees seem to get promoted again and again while the rest of the office holds on to visions of promotion grandeur teased every few months during coaching checkins. Unless you are lucky enough to become a pet of someone who carries substantial influence, look for promotions to be based on popularity rather than hard work and rigor. Be prepared to work your laurels off, with little to no recognition of your efforts. After several years of going through the process, I still question the formula they use for promotion, despite leadership providing “transparency” in the process that is really only a happy path for a few shining examples. Leadership Leaders in the office often use the title and position of power to gossip about those outside of the protected inner circle. A male director once encouraged me to flirt with a male client to further his agenda to win more work, and asked for updates several times after to see if I had made any progress. It was an extremely uncomfortable work situation, but I did not feel comfortable escalating to the HR department as many other confidential matters from coworkers had later been shared in office gossip and I feared for any backlash to come from my vulnerable experience. Even my exit interview quickly turned into a gossip session, with no notes documented from my seemingly very relevant concerns and experiences. Although CapTech has a handful of great “leaders,” very few are actually recognized and put into positions to lead with the completely obtuse promotion process. The annual “playbook” is full of hopes, promises and of course core value buzz words, but is never actually applied in any matter that would benefit how the office is managed. I will always appreciate CapTech for the growth opportunities I was afforded and friendships made during my tenure. Most of the group that made the culture so special have since left, with even more departing/furloughed/laid off during COVID. With some serious changes, starting from the top down, CapTech could once again be a place where folks feel valued and supported.

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CapTech Response
5y
Thank you for your review. I’m so sorry to learn about your experiences, and they are indeed troubling. I’m also saddened to read that you weren’t comfortable working with your HR leadership. Please reach out to me directly at kapostolides@captechconsulting.com. We are looking into the feedback out of Charlotte and share your hope of a new normal on the other side of the pandemic. –Katy Apostolides, HR Director
2.0
Feb 20, 2020

It's Really Not That Great

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you're on a remote delivery project you have some flexibility to work from home. Most of the people are nice.

Cons

Where to begin…let’s start with Marketing. Marketing does a stellar job of making CapTech look like a cool, modern, young, fun place to work (consider that a Pro). But it’s just like everything they tell you about social media: it’s not real! I was so pumped to come here because of what was publicly presented and was sorely disappointed. The Richmond office is a terrible and outdated facility and there is no social/fun culture here (according to other reviews, other offices have the opposite problem of partying too hard so go figure). If you’re reading this thinking about taking a job at CapTech because it looks like a cool place that values employees’ satisfaction – it’s smoke and mirrors, my friend, so keep walking. Projects are hit or miss – I’ve been bored out of my mind or beyond stressed out. A common type of project CapTech has pursued and won is thankless and is always poorly set up from Day 1. The big wig pitching the sale is so concerned with winning the work that they agree to an incredibly low budget and timeline compared to other bidders. The big wig gets a nice bonus and a hearty congrats from senior leaders while the team doing the work is screwed every way possible. Not enough budget = small staff. Small staff + insanely short timeline = late nights and weekends y’all. As a thank you from the big wig for all the hard work, the team got Chipotle for lunch once ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Next up: promotions. The good news is if you are a college hire, promotions are a breeze. You’ll go from consultant to senior consultant to manager in 4 years flat. If you’re a lateral hire, you will have a much tougher hill to climb. But the easiest way to climb that hill is to buddy up to the senior leaders in your office so they “know your name”. It truly doesn’t matter if you’re killing it at the client and all your feedback is absolutely glowing. If the people making the decisions don’t know your name, you’re not getting promoted. Because this is the unspoken promotion process, talented consultants are getting passed over for big-egoed extroverts that put networking above all. (Spoiler alert: brown-nosing doesn’t translate to good management skills.) The most talented consultants are leaving in droves and thus turnover is incredibly high. CapTech is trying to fill the openings AND continue to grow which leads to a ton of pressure on recruiters to bring in warm bodies and the bar just keeps going lower to meet demand. I know at least one example where a sub-par candidate was hired because the recruiter was told to hire a specific type of tech talent “like yesterday” and there were no other candidates that fit the bill. Hiring mediocre consultants makes a mediocre company. With this hiring mentality, CapTech will stay a second-tier consulting firm.

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CapTech Response
6y
Thank you for your feedback. We are certainly sorry to hear of the frustrations you are experiencing. And, you’re right, they do not describe the CapTech experience we want for you. We want to fix that. Please reach out to me to set some time to dig into these matters so we can address your concerns. –Katy Apostolides, HR Director
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