Pulley reviews

3.6

68% would recommend to a friend

(35 total reviews)

56% positive business outlook

Pulley has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 35 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Pulley employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

35 reviews
5.0
Aug 17, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- lots of very high quality, intelligent, and very kind engineers - good culture that empowers work life balance and personal growth - high degree of autonomy in how we work - good level of engineering discipline - great tooling and devX - remote first, everyone is remote and we're great at doing things asynchronously and respecting each others time differences - encourages use of AI with a monthly AI budget for devs to use however they want - feels like the company is thriving in the current economy - the company keeps equity domain experts on staff and highly values their expertise, which is really helpful in building financial/equity products - great benefits for individuals

Cons

- equity domain can be a bit dry - equity domain is extremely complex and has a steep learning curve - huge application with a lot of legacy code and tech debt - benefits (premium coverage) are not great for families

1.0
Mar 16, 2026

Chaotic and without vision

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Fully remote -Some great technical partners

Cons

-The Leadership team is a complete mess. The founders lack any sort of strategic direction or vision. They change their mind and priorities depending on whatever buzzword they happen to hear that week. -They have been in a cycle of mass hiring and mass layoffs for the past 3 years. Just look up ex employees on linkedin to see how many there have been that have lasted under a year before getting laid off -Super super weird culture, absolutely no direction -I would be very wary about accepting a job here unless it's your only option. Even then I'd accept and then keep looking since you'll probably get laid off in a year anyway.

4.0
Jun 16, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Everyone I've met is really good at their job as an IC (as in top 1% in their field, very strong ICs) - Talented leadership is in place (Grant - Eng, Dan - Design, Jason - Rev, Laura - GTM, Yin - Product) who are all top 1% minds. - Yin as a founder is probably the fastest thinker and smartest person I've met ever. She's very very receptive to feedback, and prefers it directly. I think that's a hard thing for someone to actually have (and she actually does), and a wonderful thing for someone who's working with her to be able to do (instead of having to think politically about how to "couch" feedback). - Default public culture within our remote org helps stem the annoying parts of working remote. That combined with my founder background/I'm not very sensitive to organizational dynamics is why I feel very comfortable writing this.

Cons

- Not a place for mentorship, especially in product (if you're "new" and looking to learn, I wouldn't recommend it). In Product, better for someone who already has experience as a PM and also experience with product strategy (usually in the purview of a Head of Product -- but here it's a larger part of the PM role). What I mean by this is you have to craft the "why"/strategy with leadership and then do the "what"/execution (this is new, previously there was confusion around who exactly is in charge and when things can and should be changed). I came here to help craft strategy as well, but I think there's a lot more onus here on the individual to just come up with something and also a much higher bar for what gets approved. - We have changed "How We Work" quite often, but I also believe I was there for a very turbulent period with this. We've just hired Grant O who is a brilliant mind on this and is getting that structure in place (consistent planning, metrics, org structure, clear responsibilities etc). A lot of growing pains. - Company is basically fully remote (don't know if this is pro or con, but something you should be aware of). For me in product was a slight con for the following reasons: - (1) Won't get to the same level of comradery as in-person companies. (2) Good product strategy doesn't come from someone sitting in a silo'd room, it requires the psychological safety of "we're figuring this out, let's do it together". It's just harder to do that in a remote company. (pro, which I don't care about - you save a ton of time on commute). - Although leadership is talented, we have a high variation in good vs needs improvement managers. I'm running off of the definition of a good manager as providing guidance and letting ICs run within that guidance, but not too prescriptive. This goes hand-in-hand with mentorship (a good manager is in some sense a good mentor). As an org it looks like we're evolving to circumvent this by giving product roles clearer responsibility to set strategy, but during my time here this was particularly frustrating (combined with the above). I'm certain this or any of the cons are things the company doesn't already know. One thing that does continually impress me is that people know the most important problems that face the company and are working to address them (while doing their own workload).

Viewing 19 - 21 of 35 Reviews

Glassdoor has 41 Pulley reviews submitted anonymously by Pulley employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Pulley is right for you.