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Netcracker Technology

Engaged employer

Good for starting career and avoid otherwise - Manager Netcracker Technology Employee Review

3.0
Aug 6, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you start your IT career - NC would be a good place since entry threashhold is low and you get fairly good and quick exposure to growth. Lots of travels and client interactions in case you are looking for it.

Cons

The biggest disadvantage of working at NC is that there is no work-life balance and company would not appreciate you and your time. Most of the management is 'home-grown' with no industry insights and experience. Adding Russian roots and management style - makes it really terrible recipe for the leadership, if you can call it so - in many cases, you'll be assigned with unreasonable tasks, asked to work over-time and will be blamed in the end of the day for things that you are not guilty. Blaming employees is one of the core values at NC. Some of the managers (VPs/Directors) will still be reasonable but some - you want to avoid - Engineering Management in North America, who simply humiliates and harasses people, knowing no simple management basics. This gives a good idea of company’s values. Technology stack is very old and there is no aspiration for new things across the board. Salaries are not very competitive in most of the places. As result – you get fairly low level of knowledge and experience across co-workers. In general – people are great but when you get to understand the environment better and start tasting the flavor of company’s ‘culture’ – you’ll become very frustrated and demotivated.

Explore other reviews about Netcracker Technology

5.0
Oct 31, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The environment around and with you will help you grow

Cons

Nothing much to tell abt

4.0
Dec 8, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some historical context to start with. NetCracker was built by some of the brightest graduates of its time. It used to be an extremely successful scale-up because of a combination of two factors: 1. The right moment and place: a wealthy and fast-growing telco industry needed a fresh start in their systems to roll out the infrastructure the world is using today. 2. A business model based on consultancy-style principles: hire talented graduates and unsettled perfectionists, pay them pennies, work them to death, and make a reasonable margin because of that. It worked really well. And then they lost it all due to classic leadership failures and star syndrome. Key reasons to choose NetCracker: You will meet some of the most brilliant people here and make friends for life. You will learn how to make impossible things possible, and you will learn rigorous delivery frameworks executed at a level very few companies and people in the world can match. You will also learn team-based brainstorming of subtle and bold political maneuvering. And many other advanced skills you will probably never need anywhere else. This company truly values outcomes and those who can deliver. Their survival depends on execution, so high achievers have always been valued and quickly promoted. However...

Cons

Number one bad thing you need to know (beyond working unreasonable hours for decades and learning non-transferable skills): There is a caste system. If you are 'delivery', you will never be admitted into the higher caste of western office decision makers, nor will you ever be equally paid. They will work you to death, promote you into even more impossible missions, but will never consider you at the same level, despite you owning the entire delivery process (revenue generation!) and managing teams of hundreds of people. NC operate in a highly chaotic and politically heavy environments of impossible transformation programs. They frequently commit to delivering programs that cannot be delivered, so they burn their high achievers to exhaustion and then praise a caste of politically savvy, non-tech 'managers' whose main role is not delivery but navigating the heavy corporate games of dinosaur-like or inertias telcos without any measurable outcomes. NC charge clients for software implementation, they pay you like you are doing some leisure product development, but in reality, company and tech teams at the forefront are driving painful full-scale transformations for which western-world consultants would charge $ thousands per hour. Ever heard of leadership skills? Forget about it. The entire leadership vertical has none, and no intention to develop any. (On the senior management level think of micromanagement, lack of EQ, team dysfunctions, lack of transparency, favoritism and all other toxic traits of poor leadership). Heard of things like QBRs, strategy planning, OKRs, etc.? Non-existent. Real program management or portfolio management? Non-existent. The entire workforce outside of Boston is treated like a body shop. No transparency of the company strategy. It’s both: there is no comprehensive strategy planning in place and a 'none of your business' attitude. The so-called department managers also have zero general management skills. No understanding of how to direct, plan, or execute strategy. And 90% of them don’t possess even basic people-management skills.

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