Tough environment and culture, can't in good conscience recommend - Anonymous employee Sensor Tower Employee Review

1.0
Oct 29, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Starting salary (but don't expect large raises in the future) - stipends (wifi/gym) -some very lovely coworkers

Cons

- I cannot stress this enough, the culture here is tough. Expect extremely long hours with constant pivoting and pressure from the CEO, who takes it upon himself to get deeply involved and will cause your team anxiety, and make you feel like you can never do a good enough job. - Its all politics, if you make one mistake, be prepared to be on the outs. - For a company that has been around for so long, feels like there is not a want to adapt, grow and scale in terms of systems and processes. Getting rid of tools (no intranet, using slack for everything) not having a robust performance review process, promotions feeling subjective and more. - You will never feel safe. Someone is getting fired it feels like every week and disappearing off slack. - It's an open secret that everyone knows the CEO causes chaos and a lot of issues, but no one on the C-suite is brave enough to push back (anyone who has was let go).

Explore other reviews about Sensor Tower

5.0
Mar 20, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great culture, realistic KPI's, overall ideal place to start in the tech sales industry

Cons

Not applicable here at the moment

1.0
Apr 17, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The technical challenges are interesting. You will have the opportunity to work on complex problems alongside some very talented people.

Cons

The primary source of toxicity is the CEO, who maintains control through public humiliation and aggressive "dressing downs." No one is safe from these outbursts, but he is particularly hostile toward women, frequently subjecting them to openly dismissive treatment that would be unacceptable in any professional setting. He uses technical meetings and public forums to belittle individuals, shouting down anyone who offers a different perspective or attempts to uphold professional standards. It is a culture of intimidation where "leadership" is synonymous with bullying. Because the CEO is so volatile, the management layer has devolved into a collection of "minions" focused entirely on survival and internal politics. There is no psychological safety, which has created a climate of surveillance where backstabbing is the primary way to gain "pull." Managers are more interested in disparaging their colleagues to stay in the CEO's good graces than they are in shipping quality products or supporting their teams.

3
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