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Programming Hero

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Employee Friendly environment - Anonymous employee Programming Hero Employee Review

4.0
Feb 26, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

They help always if you be an honest person. the colleagues are good and anyone can reach other.

Cons

always have to connect online.

Explore other reviews about Programming Hero

5.0
Dec 24, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Programing hero learning process is best. They take care all student one by one.

Cons

Actually, I don't see any downsides in programing hero.

3.0
Nov 21, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

* Friendly and helpful coworkers: My teammates were supportive, approachable, and easy to collaborate with. * On-time salary: Salary was always paid on time, which gave a sense of financial reliability. * No overtime culture: There was no formal pressure to stay beyond scheduled hours. * Flexible shifts: It was usually possible to switch shifts with others when necessary, which helped with personal commitments. * Religious flexibility: If a session overlapped with prayer (namaz) time, we could take a break to attend it.

Cons

* Learning opportunities not delivered as promised: We were told we would get learning scopes such as access to online courses or their own courses. I personally requested access to one of their own courses but never received it, which felt disappointing and inconsistent with what was communicated. * Pressure to inflate student marks: To meet targets, instructors sometimes had to give extra marks to students who did not fully deserve them. If we deducted marks for things not explicitly mentioned in the assignment requirements (e.g., poor UI when UI wasn’t clearly stated), students complained and management didn’t back us up. This often forced us to compromise on fair assessment. * Lack of transparency: Team sometimes organized workshops or special sessions, but we only learned about them after they were posted on social media or when students asked about them. This created a feeling that we weren’t part of the same organization and were being left out of internal initiatives. * Unequal enforcement of rules (scrum & reporting): Some people often missed scrum meetings or didn’t update session/monitoring details in Discord, yet no action was taken. Juniors, however, were expected to strictly follow these rules. It felt unfair that either everyone was not held to the same standard, or the rules weren’t consistently enforced. * Unclear decision-making & communication: Sometimes new processes or changes were introduced and then dropped midway without proper communication to the team. This led to confusion and extra mental load. * Full-time opportunity miscommunication: After my contract ended, I was informally told in an unofficial meeting that I’d likely be offered a full-time role. But when we finally sat down for a formal discussion, I was told I didn’t meet their criteria. The decision itself is understandable, but I should have been clearly informed right when the contract ended. Instead, I continued working extra days with the same pay grade, based on expectations that were never properly managed. * Delay in release letter: Even after more than 30 days post-contract, I still hadn’t received my release letter, although the final salary was paid on time. This delay created unnecessary stress. * Short-staffed environment: The team often felt short-staffed, which added pressure and made the workload feel heavier than it needed to be. * Weekend and leave policy feels unfair: Because of workload and pressure, we sometimes had to work on our weekends (its fine) but those extra days were never adjusted or compensated later. On the other hand, when we needed leave on days that were technically working days for us (while it was the weekend for others due to different off-days), it was not possible to get that approved.

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