- Good PTO - Good healthcare, benefits overall - Culture isn't terrible
Cons
- No home office any more (unless you are lucky to live far enough from their offices) - Culture feels feels fake often (we are so special, unique, changing the world, leading the industry, bla-bla-bla), but I guess every corporation is like that.
nCino Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to post a review and we appreciate you sharing those items that you feel are the most value to our employees. We are at a point now in our back to office strategy that we no longer feel the need to defend it. Our attrition has not spiked because of it, nor have we had any trouble identifying exceptionally talented individuals to join the company since making the decision. We recognize that the back to office decision may not resonate with everyone's career aspirations and we respect that fact. But for nCino, back to office is getting the company back to the culture we were before the pandemic. Thank you again for your feedback. We appreciate you!
I honestly don't have any cons except they don't really invest in continuing education like they used to. Especially for external certifications. They also made pretty big changes to the downside for health benefits at the beginning of the year.
Coworkers are the kindest, most intelligent people I've ever worked with. They are always willing to collaborate with existing teammates and to teach new hires. Mid-level management and directors are good people who care about their teams. Work/life balance is well-maintained and they are extremely flexible with WFH needs. Benefits are decent, and they actively encourage social events. Flex-Fridays mean most people WFH those days. nCino experience and certifications are coveted by Financial Institutions, and look great on resumes.
Cons
Pay is really low compared to other companies, and customers (banks) often recruit employees from nCino for 1.5 - 2x the salary. High-deductible insurance used to be provided for employees and their families, with the entire deductible covered via company-provided HSA contribution. This went away last year, which effectively cut pay for employees $2000 - $8000 depending on single/family insurance.
Social culture and perks of being in-office are slowly fading away since the last CEO retired. Used to have happy hour on Fridays in Bitty & Beau's coffee shop on premises, and even the CEO would hang out with the troops. Used to have food trucks on-site often during the week. Used to have spontaneous Nerf-gun fights throughout the week, and the atmosphere was a lot more fun.