Best workplace ever with a fun, creative culture - Anonymous employee Grüns Employee Review

5.0
Jun 29, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I love working at Grüns. The people, the culture, and the endless possibilities make it such a fun place to work. Being in a creative role, I really love how management encourages creativity and fun ideas. The environment is very collaborative, welcoming, and fun. It's an honor to work at Grüns.

Cons

I really don't have any cons - this is the best place I've ever worked.

Explore other reviews about Grüns

5.0
Jun 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I came to Grüns looking for a challenge — somewhere I could genuinely grow as a marketer and a leader. Safe to say, I found it. The bar here is high, but so is the support. Leadership pushes you, but they also have your back when it counts. It's a rare combo. The benefits are solid, and the pay is competitive.

Cons

Young company - very few processes in place that can sometimes cause miscommunications or elongate projects.

5.0
Mar 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I’ve genuinely loved working at Grüns so far. In ~3 months, I’ve learned and grown more than I did in roles where I spent 1–2 years - which is kind of wild to say, but very real. The pace is fast, but in the best way. You get real ownership, real exposure, and you’re constantly pushed to level up. Also, Grüns actually means it when it talks about culture and values. It’s not fluff - it shows up in how people work, communicate, and support each other every day. And the cherry on top is that the people are the best of the best - Everyone here is sharp, driven, and just really good humans. Makes a huge difference.

Cons

The level of ownership you get from day one is amazing, but it can also be a bit of a double-edged sword early on. Coming in, I definitely felt some pressure to prove myself and take on as much as possible, which sometimes led to scope creep and fear of pushing back / asking questions. Part of that is a personal learning curve-figuring out how to prioritize, set boundaries, and ask for clarity-but I do think new hires may need to be intentional about speaking up and aligning on expectations early. If anything, I’ve learned that asking questions and pushing for clarity only makes you more effective here.

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