2 words. sinking ship - Anonymous employee HoneyBook Employee Review

2.0
Jan 11, 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- cool spacious office but don't let that fool you - unlimited PTO but depends who your manager is - health/commute benefits all the perks are pretty standard for sf startups

Cons

- bad leadership and all founders are inexperienced - favoritism is HUGE - no transparency - compensation is below market rate - turnover rate is ridiculous. probably almost 16 people left within just a few months

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HoneyBook Response
9y
First of all, thank you for such candid feedback. There’s one lesson I always instilled in our support and product teams: critical feedback is not only a gift for self-improvement, but an opportunity to make things right. You know I make myself available 24/7 and I will always give you straight talk and answers; I would be grateful to get a call from you so I have a shot at making things better. -Oz

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5.0
Sep 10, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

HoneyBook has an amazing culture with genuinely kind and incredibly smart people who bring a wealth of experience to the table. Leadership listens to employees, and the company’s mission is truly energizing—it’s all about supporting a community of independent businesses so they can focus on their craft. It feels rewarding to be part of something that has such a meaningful impact.

Cons

Because the team is split between San Francisco and Israel, communication can occasionally slow things down. That said, everyone is very collaborative, and people make a real effort to bridge the distance, which helps a lot.

1
1.0
Oct 27, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I was an employee here for many years, and it wasn’t all bad. The early days were genuinely strong - great culture, supportive management, and a product that had promise under leadership that actually understood the market. My manager cared deeply about the team, and the camaraderie among coworkers was real (though at times, it felt more like trauma bonding).

Cons

Unfortunately, things changed after covid. Leadership started focusing more on vanity metrics and boasting about financials, while the product quality noticeably declined. The culture also took a hit, I personally witnessed the People team gossiping about employees over Slack, which felt unprofessional and disappointing. There’s also a strong sense of favoritism across offices, with hiring practices that often seemed more based on referrals than qualifications. That’s reflected in the growing number of bugs and slow product performance. Accountability between teams is severely lacking, and it often feels like U.S. employees are left to manage the fallout from decisions made elsewhere. Promotions and raises are rare, if not nonexistent. Multiple times, I was told I wasn’t doing enough to “deserve” a raise, but was offered company stock instead, with promises that it would be worth more in the future. Based on the company’s current trajectory, I’m not sure that was sound advice. Communication and empathy have declined dramatically, and the leadership team doesn’t seem to understand the market they’re building for. Requests for U.S.-specific resources or context are frequently dismissed. The product itself is slow, increasingly unstable, and plagued by outages. It’s frustrating to see a company with so much potential fall into this state.

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