Red Points reviews

3.5

62% would recommend to a friend

(137 total reviews)

Laura Urquizu

68% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

Red Points has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 137 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Red Points employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

137 reviews
5.0
Jan 6, 2020

Great place to grow

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Red Points is one of the fastest high-growth SaaS companies in Barcelona and Europe. The company has had several rounds of investment and is now experiencing an exciting period of time: from startup to scaleup, which comes with exponential growth opportunities. It is a fast-paced environment. If you’re ambitious, hard-worker and think out of the box, there are opportunities for you to grow. I’ve seen some really good examples of people that have been promoted or have changed departments to pursue their career paths in very little time. Working at a high-growth scaleup sets the standards high. But this is also combined with a lot of flexibility to propose new mechanisms to improve existing methodologies or processes. I joined because I fell in love with the product and saw an incredible market potential. I am happy to see that our product keeps evolving fast to keep serving our customers’ needs. The Marketing team is one of the most goals-oriented one I’ve ever seen. I believe Marketing and Sales have to work as a whole entity and we are seeing every time more and more alignment between both departments. What I really like the most about Red Points is the people. I feel surrounded by really smart individuals and that makes me want to improve day by day. The culture is also strong: collaboration, hard-work, sense of urgency, respect and commitment. All these are values often communicated by our CEO. HR supports middle and low management with feedback and trainings. This is especially helpful for first-time managers. Also, the environment is very international and English and Spanish lessons are offered.

Cons

The company is still in a period of time where mechanisms and processes are being put on place. This is very common in scaleups in the same stage. But this is also an opportunity if you have fresh ideas that can improve things. We are agile and need to adapt fast. If something doesn’t work, we need to change it. We are in a stage where you can still see a lot of changes, but that’s part of the game. We are setting the rules in the market and for that we need to test, analyze and learn fast.

2.0
Dec 18, 2019

Wasted potential

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some very good members of staff to learn from - there are some smart people in the company who are willing to take the time to teach you stuff. The lower management and general members of staff are the backbone of the company and they've generally hired pretty well. Opportunities to grow into new positions - It's a fast-moving place, if you can handle the pressure then there's room within a year or so to get a promotion. Product - Like again, pretty good. I mean, there are a lot of cracks in the product we got to fill manually, that's why we have large ops dept, and for sure over-sold by Marketing and Sales. But, some startups it's 100% fabricated, but there is some genuinely good tech at Red Points.

Cons

Management - Some leaders are there to make a name for themselves and are not willing to listen to staff who have been there for a while. There a lot of egos in senior management, not all, but a lot don't really care for their staff or what they have to say. Goals - I've worked at tech companies before and I know the game, goals are always high. But in this case I've got to say, the growth goals are promises made by the CEO to the board the company can't deliver. The numbers don't add up and the team always falls very, very short of the objectives. CEO- It's never easy being at the top, I get that. But in this case, the CEO refuses to acknowledge the reality of the situation. Referring to the goals, when the team fell below target, like normal, despite the team working their butts off and hustling at all times for deals - the CEO's response was that people were not working hard enough. For me, that was a childish response. Whether this was because she knows the reality and can't admit it or she really does believe in the promises they've made, I don't know. CEO is a tough job and she's got her talents for sure, but too often the CEO doesn't treat people with respect, and for me, that's got to be the basis of any professional relationship. Inter-department working - I gotta say, the pressure put on each department results in some pretty testy relationships. We gotta sell a lot, this means we didn't always put through the perfect client, this means customer care (who are also understaffed) get pretty annoyed when they've got a client they can't service properly. Ops, same story, customer care get messages from less than happy clients because stuff hasn't gone according to plan, but this is because ops don't have the number to service them. This is goal-related again, high targets mean Marketing send pretty low-quality leads to sales, then we got to convert them. From my time there, marketing leadership is pretty crappy, to be honest. Overall, there's a real disregard for staff. Like HR dept sell you a cool startup when you join, and the recruitment team do sell the company pretty well. But, when you're in there, there's no real push from senior management to try and keep staff happy, it's a much more corporate vibe. If you want to work for a startup/scaleup this isn't the place. There are worse places to work, there are some nice perks and good, smart people. On the other hand, there are for sure better options out there - companies where you have a chance of hitting objectives and there is a more analytical approach to performance. No jobs are without pressure but here, it's not sustainable.

avatar
Red Points Response
6y
Hi! We're sorry you feel like this about the company. Would you consider sharing your concerns in a private conversation with me or someone else you trust from HR? That would help us a lot and we´d appreciate it! Best, Azul
5.0
Nov 6, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I have seen a lot of negative reviews here about our Barcelona office, but the situation here in NYC is nothing similar. We have two very helpful Sales Directors here to one I report directly. He has provided nothing but value and positive reinforcement to us, which has made us better at our jobs through his support. Management here cares about our success and culture. My co-workers are great & very culturally diverse; it brings out a wide range of ideas and thoughts, which I value very much.

Cons

The office is tight but I guess that is expected in a fast-growing company

Viewing 103 - 105 of 137 Reviews

Glassdoor has 190 Red Points reviews submitted anonymously by Red Points employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Red Points is right for you.