Twilio reviews

3.9

72% would recommend to a friend

(2,074 total reviews)
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Khozema Shipchandler

84% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

Twilio has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 2,074 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Twilio employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologia da informação industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
Dec 21, 2015

No career growth, poor management

Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Twilio is a place that attracts good people. People who are passionate, driven, and honestly care about one another. On an individual level, some of the best, most personable people come from Twilio and make the place feel like home. However, just because the people care about one another does not mean that the company will care about you or your personal growth.

Cons

There is no ability to move teams. There is a career growth ladder that’s largely a joke. Promotions are made through back room channels. If you’re an engineer without a CS degree, particularly if you’re a woman or POC, good luck finding people who are willing to give you the opportunity to grow (or an equal paycheck). There is no investment in growth, learning, or educational opportunities. Don’t expect to be able to join a team like Customer Support or Sales Engineering and move into Engineering! You’ll only be disappointed. Management is a huge problem. There is an excessive number of managers, and many who are first time managers who run their teams without proper training and support. The managers who are good at their jobs typically juggle 2-3 teams at a time. The rest hold personal grudges and push out people who don’t think exactly like them. There’s a lot of talk about being a DOer. Do the thing you want. Be the change you want to see. So there are a lot of motivated folks who work hard in their off hours to create programs that make the company look really good, but never get compensated for their time and efforts beyond a token thanks. So keep that in mind if you want to start a program within Twilio. Team breakdown: The Product department runs the show. R&D spends more time trying to churn out half-baked ideas than making thoughtful, careful decisions and investing in technical debt. Deployments take hours, sometimes even days. Engineering is so used to fire-fighting that there’s little chance to think ahead and invest wisely in technical decisions. Marketing is constantly fire-fighting and trying to find its voice. After 8 years, the company still doesn’t have a consistent message, target audience, or way to describe what it does. There’s a high concentration of bros on one of the teams in Marketing. HR is a mess and completely out of touch with the rest of the company’s needs. Sales is filled mostly with bros, although the BDR team and Sales Engineering seem to be heading in the right direction. Customer Support is an old boy’s club and everyone seems a little shellshocked at all times. Facilites is a gem, a diamond in the rough. If you’re remote, good luck! It’s not going to be an easy road and nobody will care about what you need in order to do your job. The Executive team is a mixed bag. Jeff, the CEO, is very passionate, but he’s more interested in becoming the next Amazon instead of building a great Twilio. Lee is a great CFO and runs a tight ship in Finance. Roy is a big company executive in a small startup land. The two don’t mix very well. Overall, the people are really great. The product is going places. But treat this place like any other job and don’t fool yourself into thinking it’s a family or they’ll invest in you for more than a year.

4.0
Dec 11, 2015

transformative cloud communications start up

Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

amazing engineering culture small, semi-autonomous teams fast iteration progress over perfection

Cons

somewhat typical growing pains experienced by fast growing start ups (nothing earth shattering nor systemically broken)

3.0
Dec 10, 2015

A good place to be!

Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

The company has a genuinely solid product portfolio and happy customers. The HR and Facilities teams make the office a nice place to be and will more than go out of their way to make you feel welcome and comfortable. The on-boarding process for new employees is better than anything I've experienced before. As an Engineer, the technologies are more often than not new and fun to work with, you're always learning and there is no shortage of interesting problems to solve.

Cons

There is a ton of bickering between the various teams at Twilio, and thinking about it as I write this, the level of spitefulness is higher than anything I've ever experienced previously. We love to talk about small empowered teams at Twilio, which we have and are. But, an unintended consequence of the myriad engineering teams at Twilio is the unproductive competitiveness. Teams (and colleagues) very frequently trash one another behind closed doors rather than practice empathy and collaboration. My take? The highest levels of Engineering management are quite adversarial and stand-offish. I don't interact with them often but in the few meetings where I'm exposed to them it's awkward. The fish rots from the head down, and I can't help but wonder if they're responsible for the conflicts and promoting some of the poor relationships found amongst the teams. Ultimately, you'll notice there is more thought on how to push engineers out than effectively growing existing ones.

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