People Nerds is what they sell, and not who they actually are. - Anonymous employee dscout Employee Review

2.0
Jun 21, 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good for networking with high profile clients, and on occasion, you work with some really talented, level-headed work colleagues.

Cons

-Upper management will string you along with promises -HR was not honest about details pertaining to some employees and changes/negotiations/status of role questions; lots of gaslighting -The office admin was also the IT person -Toxic positive atmosphere -At the time there were only 4 black employees out of 100.

Explore other reviews about dscout

5.0
Mar 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Dscout has a great product and evolving product for the AI world. The teams work incredibly well together for a remote company and leadership does a good job setting a vision and strategy while hiring and retaining low-ego employees to build and grow the company.

Cons

Nothing specific comes to mind

3.0
Mar 11, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

dscout remains a steady flame in the shifting landscape of qualitative research—its light sustained by those who still believe that curiosity can shape understanding. Innovation breathes here, not from decree, but from the quiet persistence of people who care deeply about the mark they leave. The foundation feels solid; the walls still echo with the voices of a few guardians from the early days, who remember what it was like when vision outweighed valuation. Yet on the horizon stand new architects—leaders who speak the language of growth and expansion, who will chart the next ascent in pursuit of greater reach and return. Roles shift often here (mobility?)—sometimes through opportunity, sometimes through necessity—as the company restlessly redraws the boundaries of its work. the culture still welcomes openness and exchange, though one can feel that spirit slowly narrowing, as new priorities begin to reshape the air.

Cons

the company stands at an inflection point—a place where prosperity is visible, and the horizon of a lucrative exit glimmers in sight. yet, as often happens when the numbers start to sing, the melody of shareholder value begins to drown out the human voice it once sought to understand. it’s a curious irony: a firm built on studying experience now seems intent on optimizing it out of existence. a fresh cadre of go-to-market minds arrived in 2025 to steward this new chapter, guided less by intuition than by the logic of spreadsheets and pipeline forecasts. beneath the polished metrics, though, restlessness hums. many in GTM quietly search for escape, while sales leadership drifts toward the familiar patterns of favoritism that every SAAS veteran has seen before. the company, for all its promise, feels caught between insight and indifference—between what it once set out to understand and what it has now chosen to become

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