Most discrimitive workplace I've experienced in my career - Senior Software Engineer loveholidays Employee Review

1.0
Jun 15, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- At times competitive salary potential (cash only) compared to the market, particularly at the higher end, though instances of lowball offers are more often. - Some genuinely skilled and admirable colleagues in Engineering, though they often lack empowerment to drive positive change, which eventually led to their departures.

Cons

It's definitely NOT the best workplace as they may suggest. I'm sharing my experience as examples alongside with others' which I have gathered consents to share. So buckle up: # Leadership and Workplace Culture - Lack of diversity; senior roles almost exclusively held by white males, despite them talking about diversity and inclusivity in public. Not to mention the microaggresions toward non-Caucasian and non-male employees -- Example: One of the leadership team shared a tool to distinguish one's accent, and asked everyone what accent do they have - Non-Caucasian employees face dismissive or hostile treatment. -- Example: A senior engineer said B-word to a non-Caucasian female colleague without consequences, later receiving a promotion to a management role - Nepotism and favouritism. -- Example: Someone publicly gifted a superior a bottle of wine in the office, subsequently receiving favourable project budget allocation - Harassment incidents were ignored. -- Example: CEO once openly joked in an all-hands that he wanted to marry female employee due to her accurate guess at our business numbers - Blame culture, especially from leadership roles -- Example: A leader made a horrible business decision, but shifted blames to the engineers who helped them build it immediately # People (HR) Department - No effective anti-discrimination or anti-retaliation policies - Lacks meaningful inclusivity and neurodiversity training # Engineering and Tech Culture - Rigid and micromanaging, stifling innovation and feedback - Leadership lacks clear technical vision and dismisses employee input -- Example: An IC spent months building a ML pipeline closely with the business, only to be replaced by their skip's brilliant idea because he felt like it - On the career page is is said "Technology is a means to an end", but it really isn't at least here -- Example: During my onboarding, I asked a Principal Engineer about the entire user flow, only to be dismissed with "Why do you need to know about the business?" - Political power plays from leadership -- Example: A Head of bypassed communication conventions and escalated to my manager at a certain occasion. Even another manager noted that it wasn't inline with standard practice in the org, and it was pretty odd for the person to do so # Talent Retention - High turnover in the past couple quarters due to a toxic environment, ineffective HR practices, and discriminatory leadership

Explore other reviews about loveholidays

1.0
May 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Fast-paced culture that rewards adaptability to changing and sometimes implicit priorities

Cons

- There is a strong perception that success depends heavily on aligning closely with management rather than on merit, which can discourage open feedback and independent thinking. - In my experience, certain personality types tend to do better here—particularly those who are highly social, politically aware, and comfortable navigating informal influence networks. - Middle management can be inconsistent and, at times, dismissive. For example, during a 1:1 with a skip-level manager, I was interrupted repeatedly and saw clear disengagement (e.g., yawning), which contrasted with their more attentive behaviour in public settings. - Some managers expect employees to “read the room” rather than clearly communicating expectations. When asking for feedback or guidance on career progression, responses are often vague and lack actionable direction. - There are instances where workplace dynamics feel more political than performance-driven, with some individuals advancing despite behaviours that negatively impact team culture. - The CTO appears to have limited visible involvement in technical discussions or product-level decision-making. From an engineering perspective, it is unclear how technical direction is shaped beyond high-level presentations. - A principal engineer leads a small, informal group that heavily influences tooling and technology decisions. These decisions are often presented as directives, with limited opportunity for broader discussion, and concerns raised are not always addressed transparently. - I observed a case where a colleague’s probation period was extended without clear justification, which ultimately led to their departure. Situations like this raise concerns about consistency and fairness in performance management. Additionally, some team leads appear to progress despite limited leadership capability, potentially due to tenure and alignment with senior stakeholders.

1
1.0
Apr 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You do get great, talented individuals passing through. Most of whom are cast out or undervalued though. The CEO is an approachable person and surprisingly not amongst the most unbearable people at the company.

Cons

Unless you fit their narrow mould, you’re marked from day one—managed out under the illusion of “performance” so they don’t have to confront their own limitations. Show any vulnerability or difference and you won’t get support, you’ll get the bare minimum until they can justify pushing you out. It’s a culture that rewards conformity over competence—where underqualified leaders and their loyal echo chamber coast by, protected by a system designed for them. Anyone who doesn’t blend in, or worse, exposes that fragility, becomes a problem to be removed rather than a person to be developed. And while they’d never say it out loud, the pattern is obvious: people from underrepresented or marginalised backgrounds—whether that’s race, gender, disability, or neurodiversity—tend to be hit first and hardest. Not because they’re less capable, but because they don’t fit the template this environment was built to favour. I’ve seen it firsthand, and I’m far from the only one. Ironically, the same people who talk about “high standards” are often the least capable—just the most comfortable in a system that shields them. If you don’t fit that system, don’t expect fairness or a genuine shot—just a quiet, deliberate path to the exit.

3
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