Gelato Reviews

4.3

82% would recommend to a friend

(177 total reviews)

80% positive business outlook

Gelato has an employee rating of 4.3 out of 5 stars, based on 177 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Gelato employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

177 reviews
1.0
28 Feb 2019

Far from self-portrayed glamour

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Telenor HQ where Gelato has offices is great. Access to good restaurants, bars, gym, all near wonderful sea-side and walking paths. There's a bike lane all the way to Fornebu from Oslo centre so you can bike both ways whenever the weather permits, and sweat out everything that happened at the office. In any case you won't need a car because city transportation to and from Fornebu is great.

Cons

In short: Working at Gelato is often compared to climbing a mountain, but they don't tell you it's done on a rough terrain, with no breaks, no clear finish line, no compass and no compassion. This is an inhumane mountain race you were bound to fail before you started. If you still want to work here, hire a Norwegian lawyer to review the contract before you sign it. If you agree to work, after thoroughly asking questions about the work time and overtime, do become a member of a union, because you are going to need it. When you work at Gelato, you are always encouraged to view the glass as full, rather than empty because the "reality is whatever we want it to be". Otherwise you are perceived as a negative person, but that won't stop me today from writing a clear and realistic overview of my time spent here. People working at Gelato (Globe, Optimalprint, Network and Air), are very sharp individuals chosen for their exceptional skills, and proven track record. The products are great, customer service is top notch, but how our own people who are responsible for this success are treated is something I've never seen in my career. We were indirectly, and then if that doesn't work, directly pressured into working during vacations, holidays and weekends! I've seen colleagues coming out crying out of meetings numerous times. You need to be constantly available on the phone - after work and even though you work in sales, that doesn't guarantee that your data/minutes will be covered. Turnover rate is self-explanatory. The record is held by former CTO who left after 2 months. Most of people which are leaving/have left now have been here less than 8 months. It is understandable why Gelato hires foreigners in majority, and people straight out of university. Working at Gelato is dull and degrading. The reason we barely manage to get through all of things on our plate is because of "smart understaffing" concept - 1 person doing a job of 3. Nothing is ever good, enough or satisfying. Decisions are made on the spot and they depend on how somebody feels at that particular moment. And this can fluctuate during the day. If it was a bad decision it will fall on the team, if there was no decision it will fall on team again because team members did not take an initiative. If you took the initiative you will be berated for X amount of reasons after you execute because there was no initial feedback from management. Again their lack of clear response will fall on you, because you did not ask for it for the 5th time. At Gelato you are a number that equals the revenue your work generates. Christmas dinner, the only social event we had in the second half of 2018 was "postponed" to end of January "due to the added pressure during the Christmas period". On-boarding happens in batches and sparingly. You watch The Salt of the Earth - a documentary about deprived societies and then you have dinner. Real on-boarding is you being dropped into the water, and learning how to swim on the spot. You will not fall short of mental challenges, mind games, brainwashing, manipulations that are crafted well, so you always feel that you are underperforming - thus sacrificing your personal time to reach arbitrary goals which were set without any proper market analysis or data driven calculations. Here are couple quotes that were supposed to "empower" us: - "It’s never about the amount of hours you work, because your passion is climbing." If you passion is working days and nights non-stop then you won't mind them not addressing anyone's time. - "We are a flat hierarchy team." - Everybody and nobody has a say and depending on how stars align, you might be reporting to several people at a time, who by the way disagree on the matters constantly. They will instruct you how and what to do, because there is lack of trust in the skill set you were hired for. You won't be doing what you were hired for anyway because your superior's opinion matters more, and you might be randomly switched to other projects that don't fall unto your expertise. After long, empty discussions and strings of emails the consensus is reached only when consequences of this miserable process start pouring out and then decision has to come - usually from the top. Management finds it very uncomfortable to tackle decisions and problems, because it's easier to leave things to sort out on its own. - "We are a startup." - This justifies everything that's wrong with this place, but most of all a total lack of respect for people and their wellbeing. It is mindblowing. The company operates for 13 years now, and I don't know why it's trying to brand itself as hip startup. There are more generic quotes from Oprah, Steve Jobs, Picasso, Mario Andretti, etc. framed around the office to keep you motivated. You'll find pristine and ideal image in PR material, and in much acclaimed "culture deck" which took them 6 months to contrive. However, the day-to-day operation is far from what is depicted in that culture deck. There is much more to be written, but I've already given them enough of my time.

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Gelato Response
7y
Thank you for taking the time to give this feedback. It offers us the opportunity to reflect and for Gelato and myself to improve. As the founder and CEO of Gelato, I am ultimately responsible for the well-being and development of our team. My intention for Gelato has always been to make it a great place to work. Naturally, our culture and goals will not resonate with everyone. Some will find the unpredictability that comes with high-growth as motivating and thrilling, while it can be frustrating for others. This is inevitable. However, nobody should be left feeling mistreated or unappreciated. For that, I sincerely apologize. Like many other fast-growing technology companies, our team size is rarely in sync with our growth. With operations and customers all around the world, it is also a reality that our email inboxes stay alive also outside of office hours. Christmas is a peak season, and workload will always be higher during that period. However, as Gelato grows, I am confident that so will our organizational capabilities, making it is easier to match growth with the workload. I am very sorry to hear you didn't have a positive experience at Gelato. We take your feedback seriously and will continue to reflect on the ways in which we can better support our team members. -Henrik Müller-Hansen , CEO
1.0
7 Sept 2021

Unhealthy

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Gelato team is a group of the most hard-working, capable and smart people I ever met and the salaries are good.

Cons

I left Gelato a while ago and it took me some time to decide to write a review. I’m doing this now mainly due to the volume of new job offers and all the press coverage they recently generated. Future hires need to be aware of what they are signing up for. When I reflect on my time in Gelato, I feel that losing control over my life and not being able to express myself freely was my biggest pain. The work is insane. I like working hard, but this is just another level of it. Gelato does not take responsibility for the mental well-being of its employees. You need to constantly be fine, energised, capable, responsive, agile and always on. You always have a feeling that you are not good enough, you feel guilty when closing your laptop at 17, when not checking your emails over the weekends, Christmas, your annual leave, your work is never enough. No mentorship, no mature leadership, management based on “what the CEO thinks”. Forget about your own judgment, you will be told what to do, what to say, and (even) how to feel about things. Your expression and behavior during meetings will be judged and you will get feedback about being not positive enough, moving too much, being tired etc. Gelato leaves no space for creativity, you are being micromanaged and you are expected to micromanage. The friendliness and being casual with your colleagues is not encouraged, you are here to work. Compassion is perceived as a weakness. No one is interested in what sort of knowledge and experience we have, you need to fit in and follow the “vision”. “Gelato culture” doesn’t exist, it is there to cover the crazy turnover: he/she left because he/she was not a "culture fit". Gelato is not interested in who you are as a person, no one has time for this. Don’t expect any sort of celebration of hard work or dedication, an occasional tap on the shoulder should be enough. Why have I stayed so long? There is such a sophisticated mental manipulation happening in Gelato, especially when you are an overachiever, or a foreigner, or someone just starting your career. The salary, the growth, and the waves of good and bad make Gelato a toxic partner in your work development. Think twice before you join.

1.0
16 Nov 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great engineers and people to work with You do get to innovate and experiment with reason. So long as speed is part of it

Cons

Expected to be available 24/7/365. If you are not... then you get labelled as not being in the Gelato culture. People are reprimanded for having their out of office saying they are not available when on holiday. The political gaming is horrendous Some of the tech is really poor. The CEO does not believe in quality - only speed. There can be a lot of rudeness from executives. Also a lot of "I am the boss, I tell you what to do". Overall it is a very toxic environment where you are expected to work all the time. If you are tired... you might get some extra holiday days, but you are expected to work during your holiday too.

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Gelato Response
4y
As always, we appreciate people investing their time in giving us feedback, be it positive or negative. We often learn more from understanding areas of improvement rather than reading about what we are doing well. It is unfortunate that you feel that our leadership is top-down, it should never feel that way in Gelato. We conduct a quarterly Pulse Survey and follow up on the results. What you point out is not something that has come up, but that doesn't make your experiences less relevant. Something that has meant a lot to us is that, just during the last quarter, we have 7 former team members who have reapplied to Gelato. They wanted to come back and they are now joining us once more. This is something we are very proud of and as long as we continue to productively relate to all types of feedback, we hope that more great former team members will re-join. Thank you again for investing your time in writing and posting this
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Glassdoor has 214 Gelato reviews submitted anonymously by Gelato employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Gelato is right for you.