Internal Issues to Address. - Anonymous employee Pebl Employee Review

2.0
Dec 21, 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people are great. There are opportunities to work in different specialities your field. They do monthly fun events to maintain morale. It’s growing very fast, which can great if you enjoy that environment. The view from the balcony is nice as well.

Cons

They don’t give any equity. I wasn’t there very long, but some people have been there since 2016 when the revenue was $2 million per year and in 2019, it was pushing $100 million. There were rumors about some form of compensation, but not real equity for the people who built the company. Pay is very below par. It’s not a startup anymore and if there isn’t equity, pay should be higher. Inequalities among departments. This is one of the easiest sales positions that I’ve ever seen. In most companies sales staff have to work to produce leads and build that relationship over time. The demand is so high that the sales staff here get most of their leads from inbound opportunities (marketing’s advertisements) with an immediate need. On top of that, they recently convinced leadership to hire junior sales members to do the paperwork that they never liked to do. Sales salaries have gotten up to 600k annual. The people working to make the business a possibility are making 40-45k annual starting out and working 12 hours a day (marketing, IT, operations). Most new hires are underpaid, working long hours while the sales teams are attending conferences in Lisbon, Vegas, & South Africa on the companies budget. It’s noticed! IT has no quality control team and are pushed to release technology updates faster than anywhere I’ve ever seen. I left because I was getting tired of coming in and seeing the marketing, IT, operations, finance, and recruiting departments all with red eyes, overworked, making less money than they could elsewhere and the sales team chit chatting, joshing around, and enjoying a good culture like the website shows. That and I received a better offer.

Explore other reviews about Pebl

5.0
Jun 4, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has been through a lot, and some of the older feedback seems tied to past chapters of the business. Right now, there is a clear push to move forward, especially in sales. The focus is on outbound, clearer territories, stronger partnerships, and getting the Pebl brand into the market after the rebrand. The EOR space is very competitive, but it is also a strong market to be in. Pebl has a good product, a strong reputation in the category, and a real opportunity to keep growing. The company is also putting meaningful energy behind technology and AI, which matters in an industry where a lot of providers can start to sound the same. This is a good environment for people who are self-starters. If you like having everything fully mapped out for you, it may be frustrating. But if you are comfortable with some ambiguity and want to have a hand in shaping how things get done, there is a lot of room to make an impact.

Cons

Some processes are still being figured out, and priorities can shift. That can make things feel messy at times. There can also be too many opinions in the room, which occasionally creates a lack of focus. The company has good ideas, but not every idea needs to become a priority. This is also not a clock-in, clock-out environment. The pace is fast, expectations are high, and people need to be comfortable with change. That is not a negative for everyone, but it is worth knowing before joining.

1.0
Jun 1, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Teams are incredibly dedicated, collaborative, and always willing to support one another through challenging transitions. - Strong focus on actively listening to and advocating for customers' needs at the team level.

Cons

- Executive leadership frequently dismisses employee concerns during all-hands calls and relies on empty promises to manage morale. - The company has gone through multiple rounds of layoffs with zero internal communication or accountability. Employees often only discover colleagues have been let go when they suddenly disappear from communication channels. - Following major organizational shifts, leadership failed to re-align priorities. This created an environment devoid of unified goals, leading to silos and internal division. - Despite the chaotic environment, the frontline employees work incredibly hard but receive little to no recognition or support from upper management.

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