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Fishbowl Inventory

Is this your company?

Stay clear! - Senior Designer Fishbowl Inventory Employee Review

1.0
Apr 4, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Salaries are ok, and they have flexible PTO

Cons

Fishbowl is owned and managed by a private equity firm, Diversis. The people at Diversis have ONE goal - sell the company and many millions of dollars. They will mow down ANYTHING that stands in the way of that. And that is ok, that’s what they do. However, that ‘anything’ is probably you. I have seen layoff after layoff. Good, talented people removed, great leadership torn down, and it has left the C-Suite shaking in their boots, unable to keep it together, and absolutely void of information and knowledge of what direction they are going in. When I first joined, it was fantastic. Now? I would recommend it to my enemies. Do yourself a favor and don’t even bother, because what it looks like on the outside is farrrrr from the inside. It’s a real shame, because when I first joined in 2022, I was on cloud 9. People were amazing, the job was great, and my boss was the best I’ve ever had in my life. The culture was fantastic, and I was genuinely excited to do my best. Now, all of that has dwindled to something unrecognizable. All that was good has been stripped away and turned into a sweatshop for the guys at the top looking to sell. One of their company values is ‘truth and love’ which they try to push, but is complete BS. Save yourself.

Explore other reviews about Fishbowl Inventory

5.0
Mar 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great people and great vision for the future

Cons

Management changes can be distracting

2.0
Apr 4, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It's a job, and the people are nice.

Cons

Fishbowl Inventory runs on outdated, clunky software, and the company has been trying to address core product issues for years without fully resolving them. Teams are often tasked with marketing and selling legacy technology while simultaneously trying to build new products, which creates confusion in positioning and execution. There can be a sense of trying to modernize perception faster than the product itself has evolved, which makes go-to-market efforts more difficult. The company has also experienced constant leadership churn. In the past few years alone, there have been multiple CEOs, multiple marketing leaders, multiple sales leaders, and multiple technology leaders. The business is owned by a private equity firm, and priorities shift frequently as new leaders come in, attempt to change direction, and then move on. Layoffs occur regularly, contributing to an environment where employees often feel disposable. There is limited long-term strategic consistency, and the company does not appear to operate with clear, company-wide OKRs. Teams often feel like they are working in a continuous state of transition rather than building toward a durable plan. Leadership turnover creates ongoing disruption, and job stability can feel uncertain. There also appears to be limited investment in employee development or long-term career growth. The culture can feel transactional — employees are primarily working for a paycheck, and compensation is only moderately competitive relative to workload expectations. While many colleagues are personally kind and hardworking, the environment may not be ideal for those seeking stability, strong product-market fit, or a clearly defined long-term direction.

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