Been here about 8 months now and honestly it's been one of the more energising work environments I've been in. The team is genuinely good — collaborative, no unnecessary politics, and people actually want to help each other succeed. As a Program Manager, you're close to the product and the mission, which makes the work feel meaningful and not just transactional.
The pace is fast (classic early-stage startup), but it means you're constantly picking up new skills. I've learned more here in under a year than I did in double the time at my previous company. Leadership is accessible and the culture is pretty flexible — there's trust placed in you to get your work done.
Cons
Processes are still being built out, so if you need a fully structured playbook handed to you, this might feel uncomfortable at times. But if you're okay figuring things out as you go and contributing to how things get done, it's actually a plus.
CareerNinja | LearnTube Response
3mo
More learning in eight months than double the time elsewhere, that's the environment we're trying to build, so this means a lot to us. Processes are still being built and we won't pretend otherwise, but we'd rather build them with people like you in the room than hand down a playbook that doesn't fit.
Appreciate you sharing this :)
Explore other reviews about CareerNinja | LearnTube
Thank you for the review! We appreciate your inputs :)
1.0
1 Jun 2026
Anonymous freelancer
Former freelancer
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook
Pros
People here are obsessed with coffee.
Cons
One of the most disappointing things about this company was seeing how little long-term employees are valued when it comes to compensation.
Recently got to know that freshers or people with barely internship-level or around 1 year of experience are being offered packages close to 17 LPA because certain roles are currently in demand. At the same time, employees who have spent 3+ years contributing to the company, taking ownership, mentoring juniors, and staying loyal are still not even close to 12 LPA.
This is not about freshers getting good salaries — everyone deserves to be paid well. The real issue is the huge gap between what the company is willing to pay new hires versus what it is willing to pay the people who have already spent years building and supporting the organization.
After a point, it becomes difficult not to question whether loyalty and consistent contribution actually matter here. Experienced employees slowly start feeling overlooked and undervalued while external hiring seems to be prioritized much more.
A company cannot expect people to stay motivated long-term when internal employees constantly feel like they are worth less than someone joining from outside with far less experience.
I genuinely hope current employees take time to understand their market value, ask the right questions, and make informed decisions for their own growth.