Candidates should stay clear - Anonymous employee Pulley Employee Review

1.0
May 19, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- There are smart and talented people that work at Pulley (and it's unfortunate that leadership cannot find a way to get everybody moving in the same direction) - Because of the confusion in strategy and execution, it's possible you'll have time to deep dive on AI and other emerging technologies if you're hungry for professional development.

Cons

- Despite having opinions about the leadership, I’ve attempted to focus on non-subjective facts in this review. - Please note that most of the recent positive reviews from Spring 2025 are from employees who recently joined the company and have only been their 2-3 months, and who were encouraged by leadership and HR to post those reviews. - Leadership frequently prioritized hiring for future capacity, despite underutilizing current staff. - Leadership churned 6 senior designers since October 2023. Two designers had such a bad experience they completely omitted Pulley from their résumés. - Leadership churned 5 product managers since 2023. - Churned more than a dozen software engineers and engineering leaders since 2023. - Scaled the engineering team in 2024, promoted a head of engineering, a software architect, and senior engineering manager, then laid them off a couple months later (part of the October 2024 layoffs due to "new strategy"). - Announced a new vision at a team offsite, then demonstrated no progress toward that vision over the next 6 months. Laid off 20% of the company a week later, including a few new hires that had not yet had their first official day. - The October layoffs are impacting the moral of newly hired engineers, who question the logic of the layoffs, and who find it hypocritical to be hiring for the same roles for the people who were laid off. - Pulley generally cannot ship. Most projects get canceled or significantly descoped. The same projects have been recycled for 3 years running. - Leadership has a pattern of asking newly hired senior employees to come up with a North Star vision. - Rallied the team around “Founder Mode” after Paul Graham’s essay made a splash, then never spoke about it about it again. - During performance review cycles, some employees would achieve an “exceeds expectations” rating and receive neither promotion nor compensation adjustment. Some employees were promoted in title only with no compensation adjustment. - There are no leveling frameworks (except for perhaps Engineering—before the Head of Engineering was laid off), so feedback about performing “under/at/above level” is subjective. - Leadership took several months to recruit an User Research contractor to conduct customer discovery research as an effort to identify new strategic opportunities. Members of the PDE org were excluded from the process, and leadership never shared the research findings with the broader team. - On multiple occasions, the COO disappeared for 4 weeks at a time, with no communication at all to the broader team, which lead to confusion and rumors each time.

Explore other reviews about Pulley

5.0
Apr 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I’ve genuinely enjoyed my time here so far. I work with an amazing recruiting team, and my hiring managers are incredibly thoughtful and intentional about designing interview processes that create a great candidate experience, which isn't always the case. In past roles, I’ve worked with managers who weren’t open to feedback or didn’t prioritize hiring which often led to unclear processes, slower timelines, and a negative impact on both candidate experience and company brand. Here, I’m consistently impressed by how much care and thought my hiring managers put into getting it right the first time. Folks here are approachable and low-ego, which makes it easy to have open conversations and collaborate effectively. I can’t speak for every team, but my time here at Pulley feels like a place where your perspective is heard and valued. Everyone is incredibly smart, and like any Series B startup, there’s still a lot we’re building and figuring out as we grow. If you join Pulley, you’ll have opportunities to shape team direction and company culture. That said, if you’re looking for a highly structured environment, this might not be the best fit, Pulley is a place where you need to be comfortable with ambiguity and excited to build.

Cons

Growth here comes with a fair amount of ambiguity. As a Series B startup, not everything is fully built out yet, so processes and structure can still be evolving. This can be exciting for some, but it may feel challenging if you prefer clear guidelines or established systems. Things also move quickly, and priorities can shift as the company scales. That means you need to be adaptable and comfortable navigating change, because teams are still building, there can be moments where resources are limited and you’re expected to figure things out on your own.

2.0
Nov 17, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great engineering talent overall, and I was genuinely proud of the quality bar and vetting we upheld. The worklife balance was good. Leadership is genuinely good at rallying people in the short term... there’s a real charisma there. But the energy fades quickly once you realize it’s mostly smoke and little substance.

Cons

As another user said, leadership repeatedly follows the same cycle: hire a large engineering team, create a roadmap, ignore feedback when results fall short, abruptly pivot to a vague new direction, then blame engineering and lay off most of the team. Product talent is consistently underutilized, with very little trust or empowerment placed in the people closest to the work. Leadership puts outsized pressure on one or two people to define both the roadmap and the overarching product vision because the founders don’t seem to know what they want to build. Leadership talks about AI constantly but never ships anything meaningful, while the core product continues to stagnate. It was demoralizing to watch product managers spend weeks developing thoughtful specs and aligning early with founders, only for leadership to push back aggressively on the foundational assumptions, force multiple rewrites, and ultimately cancel or completely reinvent the project after several cycles of churn.

9
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