DigitalOcean reviews

3.4

58% would recommend to a friend

(450 total reviews)
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Paddy Srinivasan

56% approve of CEO

71% positive business outlook

DigitalOcean has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 450 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The DigitalOcean 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

450 reviews
2.0
Dec 8, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits, good work/life balance, great remote culture, competitive salaries, great potential

Cons

The engineering organization is plagued by a bad re-org that started about a year ago but has gotten progressively worse. Teams are split into “pillars” with no plan on how those teams are meant to interface across the pillars. Communication from leadership is poor leading to isolated pockets of engineering and a product that is becoming increasingly inconsistent and confusing. Best practices and engineering standards are nonexistent as each team has freedom to do whatever they want, unchecked. Quality of leadership varies wildly from parts of the engineering organization as each pillar is responsible for its own hiring practices. On more than one occasion, hiring managers have hired their personal friends and former coworkers into roles. The company hires only generalists as engineers. You have people who are Rails experts setting up and maintaining databases. Engineers who would prefer to work on Golang are writing Javascript. This leads to general frustration and a lower quality of work. The remote benefits are so great that employees stay, even if they’re unhappy. DigitalOcean pays NYC salaries to people living all over the world, creating an unbeatable offer that people can’t leave. While this might seem like a pro, in reality it means you have a large number of disgruntled employees that feel stuck. Middle management is increasing at a rapid pace. A large majority of the new management/leadership is being hired externally, with a few very rare exceptions for internal promotion. There’s little opportunity to grow with the company as an engineer. The career promotion process is very poorly defined and documented and results in a lot of confusion and frustration across engineers. People are left wondering how and when they should ask for a promotion as that seems to be the only way that people get raises or promoted to new levels. For a long period of time there was no CTO, then there was a CTO for just under a year who worked outside of the main office and never spoke to engineers, even when the engineering organization was still relatively small. She’s since left, leaving the organization with no C-level technical leadership. With the increase in middle management and a lack of technical vision/leadership it feels increasingly isolating to be an individual contributor in the organization.

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DigitalOcean Response
8y
Thank you for the feedback. I'm sorry your experience is not living up to the standards we're setting for ourselves. We are an agile organization and as such we practice real-time, continuous feedback. The research in the area overwhelming shows that its a much better and healthier way to let employees know how they are performing in a fashion that helps them address gaps quickly and continuously improve and develop. And we have multiple formal check-ins per year where you and your manager should be sitting down and having clear and candid conversations about exactly what's working and what's not. Every single employee at DO deserves to know where they stand and where they are going. If you're not getting that from your manager, ask him or her directly for that feedback, and if you're still confused about what that means to you, please come to me directly and I'll make sure you get what you need. We have a very high bar for performance at DO and the expectation is that you are always motivated and incentivized to achieve your best as a matter of course. If something is missing in that equation please let us know what that is so we can help. I appreciate your comments about ensuring we keep focus on simplicity of the platform and power of the product. Please continue to keep us honest and hold us accountable for making sure we keep that focus top of mind for everyone.
2.0
Jul 15, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The perks are great even compared to bay area startups, though salaries could be higher. Most of the people are great. Good work/life balance. The business seems to be doing well and we're getting better at building products every year.

Cons

Virtually zero trust in leadership and with good reason. No career growth beyond single team management (not a single Director was promoted from within even though we keep calling it a "culture of growth").

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DigitalOcean Response
8y
I'm sorry our values are not reflected in your personal experience. With that, I want to use this opportunity to share my perspective on career growth at DO. I can tell you that we are deeply committed to being a deliberately developmental organization. It's something I personally believe in and I know it's a huge part of the reason the business has scaled and been as successful as you noted. But it's important to keep in mind that development and growth does not always necessarily mean the same thing as just being promoted. Development comes in many forms. We're a rapidly growing company and the scale and scope of things every employee is working on and is exposed to is exponentially bigger than it was even 12 months ago. We have products, teams and departments that didn't exist last year. We continue to invest in opportunities to learn inside and outside the company, and many employees have broadened their experience by moving into other roles across the company. Those all create the conditions for important and powerful learning and experience for growth. It is true that many of our senior leaders have come outside the company of late. That's a function of needing the experience at scale that we haven't had internally, and of an intentional desire to provide leadership and mentorship for our employees to learn from. I expect that will change as we mature and evolve, and I'm certainly committed to looking for opportunities to fill senior roles internally as well. But we remain a company that firmly believes in creating developmental experiences for employees at DO and that core belief goes well beyond title and level progression. I hope that's helpful perspective. I'm available to discuss more and I hope you do come to me and your manager if you're unhappy with the progression and development opportunities you're seeing in your career right now.
5.0
Apr 14, 2017

Great Responsibility, Great Power

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are too many to list here, but I'll break down the points that had the most impact for me: - In everything I've done, I've felt respected and cared for. There was a table full of swag ready for me before I got to the office for my first day, I've been given every possible opportunity to succeed, and I've never felt pressured to do anything if I didn't think it would help me be successful. - The perks are incredible. I work here, and I still have a hard time believing how good the benefits are. My friends actually don't believe me. Commuter benefits for remote employees, plenty of really nice swag, workstations and peripherals ... it's just awesome. - I'm really surprised at how well everyone communicates remotely. I don't even need to ping people most of the time - people are frequently checking any slack channels with new messages, so I can just leave a message and someone will get back to me in a few minutes. I haven't ever worked in a remote culture that feels this good. - I'm constantly encouraged to fix any problems I discover. I manage my goals and projects, and everyone trusts me to know what I'm doing. I'm given a lot of responsibility, but in turn, I feel empowered and eager to improve the product.

Cons

The amount of responsibility I'm given is not something I'm used to from my previous position. At first, I didn't know what to do - I was told, "We're experiencing problems in this area. Talk to some people, come up with a proposal for a solution, and write up some stories." It didn't take too long for me to feel empowered by this approach, but coming from a company that took a more overbearing approach ("We have decided that you will solve these stories, based on problems that we don't think you need to know details about"), it was a bit of a culture shock. It's overall a positive point, but the onboarding learning curve was a little steeper than I'm used to.

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DigitalOcean Response
9y
Thank you for that feedback. It's wonderful to hear the approach we take, and the values we believe in, are resonating with you. Trust and empowerment is the key to helping everyone scale with us at the pace we are growing, and love is embedded in everything we do, with both customers and employees. We recognize there's a learning curve for everyone who comes onboard and hopefully you feel we're helping you navigate that effectively. If we're not - please let us know what you need and how we can do better. I'm so glad to hear how happy you are at DO and please do encourage your colleagues to come join us - we're always looking for more amazing talent!
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