Nextworld Reviews

3.3

45% would recommend to a friend

(88 total reviews)

Kylee McVaney

53% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

Nextworld has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 88 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Nextworld 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

88 reviews
1.0
18 Feb 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- You aren’t overworked - you have plenty of time to enjoy life outside work - The office is nice and feels somewhat “techy” although the open office plan can be distracting at times - Unlimited PTO - Salaries are pretty good especially for people who aren’t engineers. This is not true for engineers.

Cons

This is where you really want to pay attention in the reviews. If you’re thinking about joining Nextworld, read all of the 2 star and below reviews. You always find someone who is disgruntled but most of them offer grounded reviews that represent really what goes on. **Group-Think** I’d summarize what happens at NW by describing the two sides that exist: 1. The executive team and their “friends” 2. The rest of Nextworld Because of familial connections or long-standing friendships, there is not much diversity of thought or background amongst leadership and key managers. It represents a pattern of hiring and promoting those on the “inside”. Many of the other leadership positions are filled by friends of the executives from their time at Oracle or JD Edwards. Normally it’s not a problem when founders hire people they know from past companies and respect. In this case, it’s a problem because they aren't/weren’t A+ players who brought fresh perspective. They brought mindsets from how things were done “at JD Edwards” which was really successful back in the 80s. Is it all bad? Of course not - they’re smart folks. But it’s led to a subpar workforce. It would have been far better for NW to hire people from modern tech ERP companies (Netsuite, Workday, Salesforce), pay them well, than use the “good-ol-boy/girl” network. This feeds into my next point. **Leadership Incompetency** I’d give the executive team Cs across the board and a D for the Chief Operating Officer (COO). Do they make some good decisions? Sure. Have they squandered millions and millions... very likely. The CEO has a really good heart. She cares about making a difference. In the right setting, I’m sure she really flourishes. Unfortunately, leading NW is not that. None of the NW executive team has built a business before and it’s very clear. They’ve hired too fast, let poor performers stay, and most importantly, lack business-sense. It’s a group of technical people trying to figure out a business. But years into the business, with just a tiny number of customers, they didn’t have a clear business or sales plan. Without firing themselves and bringing in outside expertise, it will continue. I’d wouldn’t board a ship with captains who don’t know how to sail across the ocean or over-sold seats. You might fall overboard. **Missed Goals** This one is simple. They have missed almost all of their sales goals every year since they were founded and it’s not even close. Before taking a job, ask them how many paying customers they have and what their goals were the past few years. While past performance doesn’t necessarily guarantee future performance, you certainly should be very wary. **Lack of Integrity** Reading through the other reviews (again, which I recommend), a lack of integrity is a consistent theme. They will refute this but it’s continually brought up which gives its truth much more weight. - Early customer failures (read other reviews to see what happened to the first customer) - Equity rollout - Bonus plans - PTO changes The company has always rejected the idea of anonymous feedback. They want employees to be confident enough to speak up. Unfortunately, the CEO doesn’t realize that many people are too afraid to speak up or feel it will be ignored based on the experience of other employees who have spoken up before. They flat out won’t do anonymous feedback and, therefore, based on the culture they have created, continue in blind ignorance. **You Won’t Work with A-Players** Early in your career the two most important things are: 1. How much can you learn, what you will learn, and how much can you be challenged 2. The people who you work with - this becomes your work network Talking with some of the people who have been at NW since early on, most of the top young talent that joined NW based on the grand vision and excitement, have left. That is very telling - an early stage startup with lots of funding will often maintain their early employees. Oh wait, all the other companies in the entire startup-tech universe have offered equity..... something constantly requested and asked for and only finally starting to be talked about. It’s a total shame to hear about the quality of people who have left. Historically, bonuses are given out in a socialistic way. If you’re a top-performer you aren’t compensated as such. They feed the beast of poor performance. **Pay and Upside** - It’s really sad. A number of people who have left shared that they don’t have anything to show for their time at NW except a wrinkled forehead and grey hair. What many thought was going to be a life-changing experience, turned into an experience they’re glad they moved on from. - After 5 years of existence, they had still not rolled out an employee equity plan. It had been talked about for years in vague terms. Like a carrot on a stick. Eventually, many of the driven and smart team members left because there simply isn’t incentive to stay if you have big career visions. - Except for those who got involved really early (and stayed), promotions are pretty much time-based. You may be 3x as good at your job as a coworker but you won’t be promoted because you haven't hit the "timeframe". This is almost unheard of in the startup community... sure, maybe when you have 30,000 employees but not when you essentially have no revenue, few customers, and the entire future of your business to figure out. Rather than promoting and encouraging those who can make a difference in the business, they’d rather fill the seat with someone who says yes to everything and doesn’t push the company to be better. **Financials** This section is simple: there is very little financial accountability. You should hear what their burn rate is.... I’d definitely ask about this during the interview process and then follow that up with 1) how many customers they have 2) average customer contract value per year 3) how much funding they have left. They may not tell you because it’s bad news. **Conclusion** There are some good people at Nextworld. They care and do work hard. Unfortunately, that doesn’t make up for all the other issues that exist. A number of those issues have been brought up directly with the leadership team (several times) over the years and they still remain. If you’re looking to join a startup and really want to grow, don’t join Nextworld. If you’re looking to put in 9 to 5 and make decent money, it could be a good place for you. I’d encourage you to read the responses that the “Marketing Coordinator” writes to the 1 and 2 star reviews. They don’t address most of the big issues and encourage people to use the “whistle-blower” policy which was not a public thing or communicated to employees. It’s probably how they will respond to this one. They will apologize that my experience wasn’t great and that they strive to have a strong culture. It’s really all you need to know... they hear what they want to hear and see what they want to see. This review will be ignored by the CEO and leadership team just like all the others have been. Which, ultimately, is the exact reason so many great people have left, why the business is struggling, and not much will change. I hope they prove all of us wrong.

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Nextworld Response
4y
While we are disappointed to hear that your experience at Nextworld was not better, we appreciate the opportunity to learn ways we can improve as an organization for a greater Team Member experience. Our Team Member’s time is important to us, we are glad to hear you enjoyed our new unlimited PTO policy and felt you had a healthy work life balance. We’re excited to announce that our Equity Incentive Plan has been rolled out within the organization and will foster greater alignment of business success within our organization. The leadership team at Nextworld is committed to driving a successful business with a work environment that is fun, comfortable, and simultaneously professional, productive, and hardworking. Part of this means creating an environment where people are not afraid to challenge one another’s thoughts and ideas in the spirit of finding the best answer. We’re sorry you do not feel your experience matched that commitment and we will continue to explore ways to provide the best possible experience for our Team Members. Thank you for taking the time to share about your experience and we truly hope you have found a great career fit. Our People Operations team would be happy to discuss any additional thoughts and ideas you might have for how we can do better.
1.0
13 Jan 2022

Theranos 2.0?

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Not too much stress. They don’t have many customers so performance stress isn’t a big deal. - Fair-ish salary relative to expectations. Low for how expensive Denver is getting, but you can also work lighter hours and they have evolved with WFH. - Bonuses aren't great, but overall benefits are okay. 401k match, full healthcare. Generous considering their size/revenue. - Most of your direct teammates are pretty cool. Usually, the problems people have are with the leadership and how the "business" is run.

Cons

Overall very, very difficult place to work. They say all the right things and do some good things too, but ultimately incredibly toxic. Very similar to Theranos, except instead of lying to outside investors, the leadership team lies to employees, partners, and customers, constantly saying things that aren’t true, pertaining to the business and software. People are building their careers and future here, so, with how bad the lying is, I would say the management team is extremely fraudulent and that will greatly affect people's long-term career opportunities/future salaries. - They will promise lots of opportunities to grow at a startup. Ask them what their (NW only, not DSI) revenue is. Ask them what opportunity means since they don’t really have customers. They can’t tell you. - ~20% of employees quit last year. Some have quit without having anything else lined up. - Lots of people have had mental and physical health issues directly related to work. - Leadership constantly talks bad about each other when the other person isn’t in the room. - Some of the most toxic people are long-time friends, founders, or married to someone else there, so they can get away with whatever behavior, including screaming at people in front of other employees. - Deception is rampant. Leadership will constantly lie to employees, customers, and partners. - They will gaslight you. They said they are giving employees unlimited PTO because they care. Nobody wants it. They won’t pay people out and they didn’t even give people a big enough heads up to use it. They are only doing it because the company they acquired had it. - Ask them why they’ve had such a difficult time getting customers. They will say it’s because “they don’t have enough features.” But they lost the first customer which was around for a long time and was an institution founded by the current CEO. Employees kept bringing up they were worried about the institution's satisfaction, the CEO lied and said they were happy time and time again, and now a very basic software application already dumped them. They will say they “pivoted their strategy.” - Handled COVID miserably. The founders are all Christian / Catholic and hold to “conservative” values, so you can imagine how they have personally felt about the pandemic, and what that has done to inhibit their ability to lead during a global pandemic. All the reviews on here that say the business outlook is good don't understand finance. Ask them how much they've invested vs. revenue and then try to find a company with that bad of financial metrics that didn't fail. You won't find one. I could go on and on. But before you take a job here, reach out to some of the people that have left on LinkedIn. Nobody has anything good to say about this place and nearly everyone will say the same thing. You will be better off not wasting your time. Several people are still looking to leave.

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Nextworld Response
4y
Thank you for taking the time to review your time at Nextworld. We hate to hear that it wasn’t a positive experience for you. We believe in the tenet of doing business right. Because of that, we have a robust whistle-blower procedure, and we invite you to submit your concern. We have not received any reports of fraud or wrongdoing. In response to some of the other issues mentioned, we have received feedback from other employees about the unlimited PTO shift and addressed those concerns in a company meeting. We’re sorry you feel our COVID response was not handled well. We are aligning ourselves with all local and federal mandates to ensure the health and safety of our employees while also trying to mitigate the disruption to work. We encourage you to set up a time with HR to go over your concerns in more detail.
1.0
16 Jun 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-lunch is provided once a week and a stipend for peak foods -work setup is nice with standup desks, LG monitors, herman miller chairs -new office space -people are nice -work life balance -unlimited pto

Cons

This is my second stint with a tech startup, I took this job because I was told that Nextworld was a successful company on a path towards explosive growth. My take is that Nextworld is the worst run organization in software that has over 200 employees. They were founded over half a decade ago, burning millions of dollars a month, no realistic path to breaking even, no product/market fit, constantly missing goals, an exec team with a poor track record and a total number of customers you could count on two hands. -company does a great job at first impressions and sets a high bar, but over time they struggle to live up to their own expectations -career growth is limited by Nextworld’s lack of customer growth -bought Cloud Inventory to "buy customers" and a "sales team", it's been over a half a year, and yet no new customers -under market value salaries and compensation when compared with other tech companies (they're cheap) -the equity program they rolled out earlier this year was underwhelming, it would take decades for it to be worth anything (assuming they're successful) and it’s not realistic for them to have a liquidity event or exit since they’re family owned and plan to stay that way -major employee turnover as they fail to retain the best talent -company lacks a sense of urgency, happy with mediocrity, and people are not held accountable to results -spent millions on an education product that customers don't even use -executives have no self awareness and poor soft skills including a lack of communication and transparency -upper and lower management and have a hard time admitting the truth especially when it makes them look bad which is counter to their culture -executive team lacks startup experience and adaptability and its painfully obvious they have outstripped their abilities -individual contributors, especially young professionals, are misguided, manipulated and gaslighted by management when it comes to compensation, career opportunity and what's happening at the company

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Nextworld Response
3y
It is unfortunate to hear you are not fully enjoying your employment with Nextworld, and we appreciate your feedback. Others have also shared their appreciation of our work environment with catered lunches and a strong work-life balance. And we agree that our culture and success are dependent on trust and accountability, which is why we work hard every day to develop the teamwork that creates fulfilling careers and happy customers. We all know that building a great company isn’t an exact science, but it is certainly an endeavor worth our total leadership commitment. Please consider reaching out to your management or your People Operations team to discuss and work through your concerns.
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Glassdoor has 91 Nextworld reviews submitted anonymously by Nextworld employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Nextworld is right for you.