Don't even think about it, this company is going down drain - Anonymous employee DispatchTrack Employee Review

1.0
9 Jan 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits that have gradually been taken away

Cons

The product is terrible, and even the sales people don't know what they're selling. Developers write and rewrite the code as they please. There's a lot of technical debt and little time to put out the fires. There is NO job security here. The company doesn't care if you're good at your job and do it well. If you think differently and stand up for your rights, they can fire you for that, RUN

Explore other reviews about DispatchTrack

5.0
5 Nov 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great pay free lunch teamwork

Cons

None I can think of

1.0
2 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great place to practice patience, emotional resilience, and your ability to survive in a high-chaos, low-accountability environment. Also, if you’ve ever wanted to experience what it’s like to work in a live stress test, this is your chance.

Cons

DispatchTrack is more of a marketing company than a real software development company. The product is chaotic, poorly architected, and riddled with bugs. It relies on an excessive number of feature flags, leading to a spaghetti-style configuration system that can take weeks to understand just to support a single client. Micromanagement is out of control. But what truly stands out is how the CEO treats people — it’s no surprise the turnover rate is so high. The company culture revolves around pleasing the CEO, who is known for being temperamental, arrogant, and unnecessarily demanding. Managers constantly walk on eggshells around him, choosing to play it safe rather than advocate for their teams. As a result, the flow of communication is entirely top-down. Managers don’t have the courage to speak up or push back — they just protect their own positions and maintain the status quo. There’s little to no genuine concern for employee well-being, and real feedback rarely reaches leadership.

5
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All