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
4.0
Mar 9, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very flat organization with plenty of opportunity to advance and gain a breadth of solid experience with clients ranging from financial, insurance, and government IT/MIS projects. Genuinely works to build a positive and growth-oriented work environment for their employees. Maintains an aggressive bonus model and provides employees with competitive and slightly above-par benefits. Upper management is very open about changes and direction of organization. Less than 250 employees. Actively growing into new markets across the country and provides opportunities for employees to expand into more challenging roles in such expansions.

Cons

High burn-out potential. Doesn't reward self-improvement (training, education, conferences) that doesn't have a direct bearing on client sales even if it may have future benefit in positioning or forward-looking sales. Seemingly arbitrary employee review and reward process (re: annual reviews/bonuses). Managing board has a tendency to devolve into personality conflicts that spread into general employee base. Describes itself as a "consulting firm" but more often than not really is a staff augmentation that augments with teams vs. individuals. Being challenged by extreme growth in number of employees without an infrastructure or management model in place to maintain the agility that originally established them in the Richmond market space.

3.0
Sep 23, 2025

Going downhill fast

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working with smart people. Leadership accessibility. Able to be on clients spanning 5 or 6 different industries and not pigeon-holed into one area. Culture was really solid at the beginning, with office events and happy hours.

Cons

Pay & Bonus Structure - CapTech implemented cost saving structures that hurt employee compensation but were framed as ‘driving client focus or flexibility’. - Base pay increases were stagnant regardless of performance - Bonus structure changed from an almost guaranteed performance based bonus to utilization % only bonus 2x a year for Managers & below. If you aren’t billable for about 1 month in that 6 month window due to contract dates shifting, or being held for a project that then gets cancelled, it’s nearly impossible to get the same bonus as the prior structure unless you take no PTO or work tons of extra hours (which some contracts don’t allow). The senior managers and above have a different bonus structure, so they don’t care if a contract gets pushed, as long as that work gets sold. That timing may be the difference for you in bonus or no bonus, entirely out of your control. Layoffs & Bench Time - Bench time & “upcoming pipeline” have increasingly become the sole reason for a layoff. Unfortunately, if CapTech can’t sell work in a particular area, even if you are a high performer, you may get laid off. I saw people on the bench for 6 months, and some after 30 days get the same messaging and are out of a job. Sometimes it’s a firm layoff, sometimes they give you two weeks to ‘find a project’ even though their staffing team should be doing that for you (which they will tell you over and over again). Company Financials & Staffing Mismanagement - CapTech goes through phases of winning large projects, hiring people and allowing expenses to come back, to contracts cut or clients ending early, laying off a ton of people, and cutting discretionary spend. They can’t seem to figure out how to keep a stable amount of projects or people, and billable employees are the ones who suffer. They base their financials on if their employees are 80-90% billable, but year over year they’re more in the 70-80% billable range partly due to staffing and contract length. Low Promotion & Internal initiatives - If you want to get promoted, you have to lead and engage in internal initiatives (Business Development, ERG leadership, Account Management or Portfolio support). This is because the promotion deciders aren’t typically going to be on your same project, so to remain visible you need to support internal work with leadership. Unfortunately, this creates an environment where if you produce amazing client work, even if you are recognized, it won’t be enough for promotion (which every cycle they reiterate that it’s going to be a slim group awarded). The kicker is that there is no monetary incentive for internal work for managers and below, so you essentially have two jobs, one to get on a stable project and put your hours in, bonus dependent on hours and not performance, and then a second internal job, solely based on your upcoming promotion goals. - Time at level constraints were implemented a few years back, making it harder to fast track any high performer for promotion. This has led to high performers leaving the company.

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CapTech Response
8mo
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience. We appreciate your contributions during your time at CapTech and the thoughtful detail in your feedback. We understand that changes to compensation structures, staffing approaches, and internal initiatives can have a significant impact on employees. These decisions are never made lightly and are often driven by broader business needs, client demands, and market conditions. Our goal is always to balance operational sustainability with fairness and transparency. We also recognize that the bonus and promotion processes can feel complex, and we continue to evaluate how to make them more equitable and motivating. Internal initiatives are designed to foster leadership and visibility, and can be a valuable way to grow competencies. Your feedback is helpful, and we wish you the best. -Katy Apostolides, Managing Director - HR
2.0
Feb 14, 2024

Going Downhill

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work from home is a wonderful benefit The PA leadership are good people Compensation is OK

Cons

The company core culture is being sacrificed for profits. More and more, the company leadership is focused on profits over people and recently made a large announcement as if it was no big deal that will change the core of the culture and brand of CapTech that made it a great place to work. Outside of the boring work, the dreaded potential of being dropped on bench, and the disjointed efforts of leadership to develop business, it's not a bad place to work.

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CapTech Response
2y
Our response to each Glassdoor review is not to try to mollify feedback but to ensure you know we hear you and are taking your concerns seriously. Of course profits are important as they are the backbone of the company’s ability to grow and keep our CapTechers employed here. But, we feel strongly that our culture and core values are as meaningful as ever, and profit margins do not outweigh our commitment to our people. You are welcome to contact me directly as I’m always available to connect about your concerns so we can hopefully work through them together. -Katy Apostolides, Managing Director - HR
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