Great mission, but execution fatigue is real - Talent Operations Gusto Employee Review

3.0
Aug 8, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Gusto has a strong mission and genuinely good people. There’s an effort to invest in DEI, and some teams do live the values. Compensation is fair, and the benefits package is solid. If you land on the right team with the right manager, your experience might be great.

Cons

We're constantly asked to scale and deliver without being resourced accordingly. It often feels like we’re duct-taping processes together while being held to expectations that assume we have enterprise-level tooling and support. The amount of context-switching and triage work gets exhausting fast, and even high performers get stuck in execution mode with little opportunity for strategic growth. Leadership often speaks to "building for scale" but rarely empowers the folks closest to the work to actually do it.

Explore other reviews about Gusto

5.0
Jun 10, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Smart and friendly coworkers. Excellent team culture

Cons

Tunnel visions on AI a bit too much

2.0
May 20, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The product is genuinely good, too bad the same can’t be said for how they treat the people who sell it.

Cons

Leadership talks a big game about people-first culture but the reality doesn’t match. The Chicago office expansion felt like a poorly thought-out experiment, new hires were brought on without a clear long-term commitment, and layoffs came without warning, leaving people blindsided. Crossing a billion dollars in revenue and still cutting employees sends a clear message about where workers rank on the priority list. Remote work flexibility is also a glaring weakness. For a company selling HR software to modern businesses, their internal stance on where employees can work is surprisingly rigid and hypocritical. The “flexibility” messaging is mostly optics. The broader concern is the AI roadmap. The automation push feels less like an innovation strategy and more like a slow wind-down of the workforce. Employees aren’t blind to it, it creates anxiety and erodes trust. The culture of transparency they promote externally is largely a facade internally.

10
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