RealPage was an unfortunate place to work due to the less than smart decision making from leadership. They offer a cliche, sitcom-worthy level representation of corporate America that gets real old, real fast. They push this “RealPage Promise” about being easier to do business with and putting clients first, etc. then practice the polar opposite in an almost deliberate fashion.
I find these 5-star, “this is an amazing workplace!” reviews a bit suspect. That type of positive attitude doesn't exist. One of the hardest parts about working at RealPage was the huge void in employee pride and enthusiasm across the company, where no one felt like their contributions were impacting anything meaningful or expressed major satisfaction. In other instances, most were eager to say “no” at every suggestion to make an improvement because “that’s just how things are here," which was the foundation for an extremely gloomy culture.
If you join RealPage as part of an acquisition, RUN! Run, as fast as you can. RealPage acquires 3 to 4 competitive businesses a year (it’s easier to buy the competition than make the products more competitive), and time after time it’s the same disastrous story--see Glassdoor reviews in the last 1 1/2 year as references. They’re awful at acquiring businesses, despite how much practice they’ve had, and I don’t suspect they’ll get any better at it.