Revolut reviews

4.0

76% would recommend to a friend

(5,367 total reviews)
avatar

Nikolay Storonsky

90% approve of CEO

77% positive business outlook

Revolut has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 5,367 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Revolut employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finanzas industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
1.0
May 6, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Remote work -Above market pay -Good work systems and tools

Cons

Unfortunately, Revolut is a corrupt, lying and unethical company. They have gaslighted hundreds of employees promising bonuses after achieving 150% of individual KPIs. After delivering our KPI, leadership told us they were not providing my bonus. They stated no reason why. They are effectively deceiving their employes and gaslighting them with the carrot on the stick of the performance bonuses. Employees are overworked and mistreated. Its rife with corruption, leadership is completly disconnected from the operacional employees. The company blantly lies and promises bonuses, people work for them, achieve results and then they are denied their rightful money. Most of the company is composed of Russian migrants who are based in countries across Europe but keep the same corrupted culture often protecting their own backs and discriminating against non-Russian employees and candidates I would not recommend being hired to this company unless you want to be lied to and mistreated. Stay away.

2.0
Apr 22, 2024

Where do I begin...

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Best in class UI/UX, features, benefits and integrations for SMB/MM businesses looking for an alternative banking provider.

Cons

Role: Dubbed as a 360 sales role, which is true; however, when seeking new potential leads/deals, there are few fruitful businesses to go after now, as 1: Previous AEs would have prospected them to death and have them in 12-step cadences with poor emails/touches on LinkedIn, and 2: Tenured reps have established businesses in their name. A soft metric of 60 new leads PER WEEK per rep is required, so good luck trying to find a new lead from Sales Nav if you join the organization now. Culture: Fear is rife throughout the org, and there is no job security. Life in the Revolut Business sales org is lived quarterly, and many openly talk about their next move. So forget trying to plan your personal life around this job. Sales teams are revolving doors with a lot of people joining and leaving. Leadership: Sales org execs are trying to model the organization after a traditional SaaS organization. There is consistent flip-flopping every quarter on changes to compensation package, targets, what is attributable to your targets etc. - whichever way the wind is blowing, it seems. Direct line management have been promoted internally from AE to management roles, and some might have no previous management, sales or work experience elsewhere. - they have large teams of 10+ reps. Each team has a late evening (5/5.30 pm) 'check-in' meeting to join, which is an attempt at team bonding/update on progress throughout the day but, in effect, is keeping tabs on reps and ensuring they are at their desk late into the evening. Something a lot of reps found odd would be that management would openly have interviews with potential candidates on the sales floor and not be actively listening e.g. be scrolling on their phone - many felt this was not the respect a potential candidate deserves. Money: Base salary is below average for an 'AE' role in the London market. Commissionable earnings are paid quarterly and are derived from the usage of an account you have onboarded. It is also on a tiered unlocking system, making it difficult to earn real commissionable earnings. To earn decent commission in this role, you need to get extremely lucky. For example, have somehow managed to get a VC-backed startup business into your name on Salesforce, successfully prospected, managed to onboard (nightmare dealing with internal KYC teams), from there the business has to make a conscious effort to use the account i.e., put fundraising money into the account, use FX facilities, use cards for you to derive any significant commissionable earnings. Internal processes: Onboarding new clients can either be seamless or a nightmare depending on the complexity of the business onboarding or the aptitude of the internal team reviewing the documentation - simple common sense is not really applied by these teams, which leads to poor customer experiences and frustration by AEs. Work/life balance: Not really promoted, and AEs who were deemed to be doing well would be showcased to the other reps, who would then glorify working late evenings and often weekends. Targets: Ramped up quarterly and by tenure and as mentioned previously, each account you onboard needs to be actively using the account to contribute to your target making it impossible to forecast hitting target or not - each quarter is groundhog day and a fight for survival. Sales Tools / Internal tools: Salesforce & LinkedIn Sales Nav for prospecting. There are no data scraping tools for email addresses/phone numbers, which makes finding new leads impossible. Internal FAQ pages are a mess and trying to find up to date information is difficult as they are often deprecated, leaving sellers to waste time crawling through internal forums or asking management. Low grade Asus laptops which run Chrome OS are provided which are littered with hardware issues. Career Progression: There is no defined path into a midmarket / enterprise selling role in this organisation. The average tenure of a rep is probably less than a year from either burnout, a tap on the shoulder, or luck in finding a role elsewhere. Overall, the sales organization is trying to model that of a typical SaaS organization (which it is not). You need to be lucky to earn sizable commissionable checks (which recruitment fails to disclose in the process, as they say OTE is 'uncapped') - do not be fooled. Revolut has developed a terrible name in the market for culture, and this has become widely known by many. So really consider the benefit to your career in taking a role here.

1.0
Apr 10, 2024

Highly Toxic and Dehumanazing

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good salary and highly technical people

Cons

This is by far the most dehumanizing, toxic, and dreadful workplace I've encountered. With over 10 years in fintech and startups, this environment tops my list for toxicity. The leadership, led by the CEO and his minions, perpetuates this toxic culture, viewing people solely as numbers and resources, never as humans. Managers and the culture here thrive on conflict, fostering an intensely combative atmosphere. Your peers and colleagues within your own team see you as an adversary, turning work into a perpetual mental chess match. Instead of support and collaboration, colleagues consistently aim to dominate. Even if you accept their feedback and suggestions in a friendly manner, they perceive it as their victory over you, rather than genuine cooperation. Those who succeed and advance are typically bootlickers, serving as guardians of this toxic culture. All managers and leads staunchly defend and uphold the CEO's aggressive and dehumanizing behavior with unwavering loyalty and conformity. However, the most appalling part unfolds during business and product reviews: constant exposure, humiliation, and retaliation are routine. The CEO subjects people to pure moral harassment, treating them like garbage at will. This environment breeds a cult-like atmosphere, where individuals exhaustively prepare for presentations and reviews to appease him, as if he were a tyrant deity. People practically bow down when humiliated, apologizing and promising to improve next time. This company epitomizes the worst of liberal financial mentality, where our salaries are deemed our only measure of respect. Those who stay endure out of necessity for the job, money, visa sponsorship, and financial stability for themselves and their families. Yet, it exacts a steep toll. Unless you're a robot, psychopath, or simply don't care, burnout and mental health issues are inevitable. Avoid this company at all costs.

Viewing 241 - 243 of 5,367 Reviews

Glassdoor has 5,991 Revolut reviews submitted anonymously by Revolut employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Revolut is right for you.