Deaf ears, it's about who you know - Anonymous employee Starling Employee Review

1.0
Jul 6, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- 5 days extra Al when you've been here a while - 6 months paid maternity - nice offices - some form of hybrid (but can easily offer full remote *if they wanted to* - really talented staff in some areas, especially of they have been around for a few years

Cons

- massive cultural change for the worse (anne wasn't perfect but she actually cared about the staff) - HR doesn't care about the people - Managers don't care, and just spit out the same spiel "give us feedback, give us the risks, we'll sort it" - which is a lie - Recruitment team doesn't care about internal hires who actively work on improving even if their opportunities are scarce - development is non existent unless you suck up to management. It's no longer accessible to move teams and develop in areas you're interested in - they do internal satisfaction surveys but don't actually accept the negative feedback.. it's anonymous, why should I talk to you about it? No thanks, don't want to be made redundant just because things are going downhill and I want to say it without fear of repercussions - no longer offer reasonable pay rises in line with living cost crisis (and think just a 2% pay rise should be enough to keep us happy) - they rub in their bonuses and how it's making a profit but instead make people redundant, burn out and leave - benefits are stale and they don't listen to new ideas

Explore other reviews about Starling

5.0
Jan 15, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Amaizing people Good benefits Flexible working hours

Cons

There is nothin I can think of at the moment.

1.0
Apr 24, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It is a strong platform and the customer is clearly important to the business. There are also good, hard-working people across the team who care about doing a good job and stay professional despite the environment.

Cons

The problems in finance come from the very top. Too involved in day to day detail, do not give people enough room to do their jobs, and create an environment where people do not feel comfortable speaking openly, questioning decisions or raising concerns. The culture feels controlling and very low trust. Pressure is high, but support often feels very weak. Good and respected people have left, and that says a lot about the current environment. People who work hard and add value do not always feel properly supported. The day to day approach creates uncertainty and stress where it should create clarity and confidence. There is also a gap between what the top tier in finance says and what people actually experience. Talk about empowerment, wellbeing and positive culture does not match the reality. If those things matter, they need to show up in everyday behaviour. Too often, it feels like image over any substance. Overall, trust is very low, morale is poor, and open discussion does not feel encouraged despite employee survey feedback.

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