Lack of Vision, Trust, Layoffs and Instability - Development Engineer L1 Falkor Employee Review

2.0
Jan 30, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Ok, pay as per market standard. Good benefits, goodies, and events. Good health insurance and accidental death coverage. Well, leave structure and enough leaves. Flexible work structure. Udemy subscriptions. Free lunch and breakfast. Festival and other bonuses.

Cons

The company suffers from a lack of vision and trust in leadership, with decision-makers appearing disconnected from ground realities. There seems to be little awareness or accountability for the company's declining performance, particularly with Digital Ocean, which has been failing due to poor execution and a lack of market traction. With no customers and dwindling revenue, securing an annual budget has become increasingly difficult, creating a financially unstable environment. In November 2023, the company conducted a layoff affecting 15-18 employees, a move that reflected mismanagement. Instead of holding leadership accountable for their mistakes, the restructuring merely protected favored employees, leaving others to bear the consequences. Additionally, the organization has created redundant and unnecessary roles seemingly to secure jobs for certain individuals, rather than making strategic, merit-based workforce decisions. Now, another major restructuring is underway, with one department(DO) being merged under a different entity. All India-based employees are at risk, with no transparency about their future. This ongoing instability signals a dark and uncertain future, making it difficult for employees to plan their careers or feel secure in their roles. To make matters worse, the company’s internal review system (Winningtemp) is manipulated, with employees being pressured to submit positive feedback via chat messages and direct requests. This completely undermines the credibility of internal feedback mechanisms and falsely portrays a positive work culture. Furthermore, the Great Place to Work (GPTW) certification is highly questionable. Given the internal culture, lack of real progress, and excessive focus on branding and publicity rather than actual work. The reality within the company starkly contrasts with the polished external image they try to maintain. This company presents a highly unstable and mismanaged work environment. Employees, especially those in India, face job insecurity, favoritism, and a leadership team that lacks both accountability and strategic direction. If you're considering joining, think twice—the long-term prospects here look increasingly bleak.

Explore other reviews about Falkor

5.0
Oct 10, 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

a lot of room to grow, good company growth, great people

Cons

a bit chaotic at times

1.0
Feb 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Salary arrives on time. A few capable engineers doing their best despite the environment.

Cons

This company consistently presents itself as a technology firm without operating like one. The software is poorly designed and poorly implemented, with architecture that feels accidental rather than intentional. Core engineering practices such as testing, performance discipline, maintainability, and rigorous code review are inconsistently applied or deprioritized. Leadership significantly amplifies these problems. Technical Directors and senior technical leaders often lack fundamental software engineering understanding, yet make high-impact decisions with confidence and little accountability. Engineer feedback is ignored unless it supports a predetermined narrative. The organization prioritizes perception over substance. Much of the emphasis on customers and adoption centers on forced proofs-of-concept designed to create the appearance of traction rather than evidence of stable, production-ready products. The gap between what is demonstrated and what actually exists is persistent and well known internally. Morale suffers as a result. Capable engineers disengage or leave, while those who remain learn that honesty is discouraged and optimism is expected. Problems are rebranded instead of solved, deadlines are committed without understanding the work, and repeated failures are normalized and reframed as progress.

3
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