OK for a job, not for a career - Programme Manager TikTok Employee Review

2.0
Aug 27, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Well-known company that looks great on the CV, will match your current salary so if you’re already making good money you’ll continue to do so. Decent benefits, although they’re getting progressively worse. Might be opportunities to move up into more impressive-sounding titles to then leverage into a career step-up externally.

Cons

This is not the place for a career. Sure, you can climb upwards, but the salary won’t climb with you. The complete lack of empathy from senior management makes it clear that you are not valued or respected. Company is run on chaos, there’s no organisation and no communication. Constant restructuring and the people in charge have no idea what they’re doing, and refuse to listen to the experts they’ve hired. Every time the shortcomings are highlighted, the response is always the same; “we’re still a start-up” If you’ve been offered a job at TikTok, by all means do take it, but have an exit plan ready and don’t stay longer than you need.

Explore other reviews about TikTok

5.0
Apr 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good learning experience, get to work on global products

Cons

- Not very visa flexible support for students

2.0
Jun 15, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay is level with industry and actual work is somewhat interesting depending on the team you're on

Cons

In my experience, career growth can feel very limited if you are not part of the dominant internal language and cultural network. A significant amount of important context, communication, and decision-making happens in Chinese, which can make non-Chinese-speaking employees feel excluded from key conversations and promotion opportunities. The environment did not feel as inclusive as it should be for a global company. Advancement often felt less tied to performance and more tied to whether you were connected to the right groups or able to operate fluently within the Chinese-speaking side of the organization. Over time, it felt like non-Chinese-speaking employees had fewer long-term career paths and were at risk of being replaced by people who could better fit that internal operating model. Things also move very slowly because employees are often given access only to the bare minimum needed to do their jobs. There is a heavy push toward using AI tools, but in practice it can make it harder to get help from real people. Instead of getting quick support, you often have to spend time going through AI bots or internal tools before getting a useful answer.

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