Please avoid if you value your mental health & career - Anonymous employee Goodlord Employee Review

1.0
May 24, 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- The office dogs - Potential for innovative idea that could make an impact - Well-located offices (close to Shoreditch/tech environment)

Cons

Poor leadership : - Leadership promoted a cult mentality around drinking, very late hours and bad mental health and set bad examples for younger employees to follow - Very young leaders with no real experience: obviously entrepreneurs can be young and inexperienced -- current COO's ONLY experience is being a fudge business owner! However he did not have other professional input or mentoring to help him run the business (which probably explains how the business has turned out...) Communications/Transparency: - Very poor communication from senior leaders to employees - Lack of transparency and very insensitive handling of the redundancy process, turning what should be a very professional matter into something poorly organised - Frankly, the recent spurring of positive glassdoor reviews here look like a marketing/campaigning effort to combat negative press -- a cheap effort instead of tackling their issues at the source Work/Life Balance: - As typical in startups, workloads not monitored by managers - life does get hectic but people were actively encouraged to work until 9, 10, 11 pm every other evening. They were applauded for this, the cult-centric mind-set leads to burn-out and people exhausting themselves with no real progress or productivity Career Progression & Management: - People are promoted to become managers with no qualification or interrogation of their ability to fit that role. - No official process for promoting people, progression, approving salary raises. - No official performance reviews or salary reviews – this meant it was incredibly easy for people to get salary raises approved by a senior leader as long as they were well liked, and similarly there was no official forum to feedback on performance or areas of improvement. Office culture: - Heavily focused on drinking and partying; a habit for people to come in hungover (or not show up) the next day - Hungover/Absences were not corrected by senior leaders as often it was senior leaders themselves taking part - Extremely toxic behaviour throughout throughout - Very white male dominated culture - no efforts for diversity or inclusion - Be prepared to face extreme difficulty voicing your opinion or progressing if you are a person of colour or a woman - unless you have developed special relationships with the right people

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Goodlord Response
8y
Hi there, Thanks for your feedback. You've clearly taken time to reflect on your experience at Goodlord and I'm very sorry to hear that it wasn't a positive one for you. I'm not sure when you worked at Goodlord, but I wanted to address a number of points you raised directly. I think our culture, leadership and structures around career progression and management have changed a lot as we've grown as a company. Leadership: - We have an experienced CEO, William Reeve at the helm of the management team. He's had operating or board roles at Lovefilm, Secret Escapes, and Zoopla. Our management team as a whole now encompasses a wealth of experience from different industries and types of company. Communications: - We have put a number of different communication methods in place to ensure we are highly transparent with exactly where we're at as a company, including a new and improved Friday huddle where we focus in on what a particular department is doing and how they're performing. The good, the bad and the ugly is openly shared and there's a Q&A afterwards where anyone can ask the leadership team whatever they like. - Aside from this, we've focused in on whole team communications when processes are changing or there's developments in our product to ensure that everyone has the information needed to do their job well. Work-life balance: - It's certainly true that in the past we have had issues with work-life balance. As you point out, this is a startup trope that leads to burnout and frustration. We've worked really hard to address this, with managers taking the lead to ensure people go home when the day is finished. I'm pleased to say that working later than 6pm is definitely now the exception rather than the rule. - Managers also check in explicitly about how people are feeling about their work-life balance in every single 1:1, meaning that if it is off-kilter for any reason, we can address it quickly and re-evaluate workload. Management: - In Q4 last year, we introduced a comprehensive manager training program which covers every aspect of management - from 1:1's and giving feedback to how to provide a good onboarding experience. - We have a clear and universally applied policy on internal moves. No-one is ever promoted into a role without their skills and experience being properly evaluated via an interview, and compared to external candidates in most instances. - We also recently introduced new Goodlordian guidance on how we make salary and promotion decisions. Everyone at Goodlord is guaranteed a salary review on at least an annual basis, and all promotions have to be approved by the entire management team. Office culture: - I would accept that in the past we haven't had that much diversity in the type of social events we had as a company. I'm pleased to say this has changed, and in the last quarter alone, we've had open-mic nights, a range of talks from different speakers and free breakfasts, none of which revolve around alcohol. We think hard about the inclusivity and accessibility of the team events we have. - We absolutely do not tolerate people coming into work unable to perform their duties for any reason. One area we still have a long way to go on is the diversity of the senior team, however, we're moving forward on this on several fronts. For example, our entired interview process is designed around reducing bias (from the structured way in which we interview, to how we score candidates). We have training on reducing bias in interviewing which all of our interviewers take. Again, I want to thank you for taking the time to give feedback. Obviously none of the above comments about initiatives we've got going on represents an endpoint - we're constantly evolving and changing, thanks in no small part to honest and open feedback from all Goodlordians. The Goodlord People team

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4.0
Jun 25, 2026
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Pros

Nice culture and nice office in London. Ceo was very great and very friendly to everyone no matter what level you were and cared.

Cons

Constant changes in leadership and direction. Low compensation

1.0
Jan 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company is in a growing sector and has scope to deliver a genuinely impressive product. Some of the lower level staff are genuinely kind people trying to do their best.

Cons

Working at Goodlord was a distressing experience. The culture is defined by a staggering lack of professional boundaries and a management style that borders on bullying. Leadership frequently uses intimidation and public humiliation as a means of control. There is a noticeable lack of respect for expertise; management is often dismissive of qualified staff, preferring to "talk down" to employees rather than foster a collaborative environment. The office atmosphere is exclusionary and highly stressful. Communication from leadership is often unkind and impatient, with a "sink or swim" mentality that is never backed by proper training or a clear induction. There is a heavy layer of middle management but very little actual accountability or transparency regarding workload and staffing changes. It is an environment where basic human dignity feels like an afterthought, and the toll on one's mental health is significant. I would strongly advise job seekers, or those who value a professional, respectful culture, to look elsewhere.

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