Great place to work - Engineer ThinkLP Employee Review

5.0
1 Oct 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits are solid here, way better than where I was before. Pay's also gotten more competitive which shows they're paying attention to keeping good people around. The work itself is interesting and there's a founding team vibe even though we're not really a startup anymore. CEO considers everyone a co-founder. You get the start up feel without the fear of funding running out. Team moves fast and can get intense sometimes but if you like building things, it's a good spot. The talent is always improving, which I like. I learn from my peers.

Cons

Communication sometimes is tough with how fast we are moving. The pace is fast and intense which isn't for everyone. It causes tension at times.

Explore other reviews about ThinkLP

5.0
28 Sept 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

i've been in loss prevention for a while at other companies before this. thinklp is doing things differently and it shows. customer conversations are genuinely exciting and we're pulling people from all over the industry. the CEO has a clear vision on where the industry needs to go. he's had to make some tough personnel calls, but honestly they needed to happen and not every company is willing to make those decisions. if you want to get in on where the industry is heading this is definitely a good place to be

Cons

would like to see more LP people involved in building the product

1.0
28 Aug 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some of their customers don't realize how bad their software is.

Cons

This is a company that built a spaghetti mess of a software 'platform', on top of Salesforce, with zero expertise, or attention to how it will grow and scale and interact. There is no documentation, the bare minimum of testing-- just to get past Salesforce' requirements, and constant constant regressions. Instead of fixing their product development practices, they hired sales and customer service people to sell their shoddy product and patch up the holes. The original owner sold it to private equity when it got unsustainable, and then they put in leadership who care nothing about the tech stack, the product, or their employees. This leaves leadership with two tools in their chest when things move slowly, gaslight everyone into thinking things are great and they just need to keep going without fixing anything, or when that stops working, fire everyone. At the same time, Sales and Customer Service know on some level that their jobs are redundant if the product is built properly, so are actively hostile to the product development team.

12
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All