Unity reviews

3.4

52% would recommend to a friend

(1,761 total reviews)
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Matthew Bromberg

58% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

Unity has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 1,761 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Unity 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

2K reviews
2.0
Nov 10, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Walking distance to BART Cutting-edge tech stack. Food and snacks.

Cons

Morale: Very low. Everyone I know is unhappy and looking to move out. This place is toxic to its core! Leadership: A joke. Constant reorgs. Too many incompetent and political managers who only care about themselves. ALL tech leads are first time managers. Go figure!! Hiring: There are better tech companies out there with better culture, benefits, pay. Career growth: LOL. HR: the worst of any team I've encountered.

2.0
Jan 20, 2019

A few pros but a lot of cons

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- A fun place to work. People are very nice and approachable. This is the best part about Unity. - Food is pretty good but if you work late they don't provide dinner. - Snack quality is declining but it's there. - Paid health insurance. 100 bucks wellness benefits and 401k matching. - Work life balance is pretty good if you end up on the right team.

Cons

- Filter out all the fake reviews that are obviously posted by recruiters trying to bank some commission. There are lots of them and they are not accurate portrayal of what's going on inside Unity. - Low caliber talent pool. Unity is desperate for coders and the hiring bar has suffered as a result of that. It's hard to count on people to get their stuff done. - Performance review is extremely unstructured. It's very hard to take perf review seriously at Unity. Whatever you say will go unnoticed and it seems to have no effect towards compensation. - Low caliber managers. Anyone .... literally anyone can become a manager at Unity. If you want a 'lead' title, Unity shall provide. If you suck, no worries there is no consequence. You can always revert back to IC. - Last but not least, if you are financially motivated. This is not the place for you. No target bonus. Compensation change is rare and stock package is a joke.

1.0
Apr 24, 2018

Not sure where all the positive reviews are coming from...

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A lot of hype and promise with the roadmap for the core (engine) components of Unity.

Cons

Morale in the services side of the company is pretty low (services being Ads, Analytics, Infrastructure Engineering, etc.). "Empire building" is the norm as teams fight for political power (aka ownership of projects / products / infrastructure) within the company before the mystical IPO date. Teams are bleeding talent as competent engineers quit to escape the toxicity of constant doublespeak that aims to minimize accountability. In order to hire fast enough to compensate for the attrition, recruiters will blatantly lie to potential candidates regarding how valuable the stock options are and how close the IPO date is. They will be misled into believing that their work can actually have tremendous impact, when in reality they are all treated as replaceable coding monkeys churning out piles of code for endless migrations. There is also no hope for any career growth, as HR has an official policy of "no paperwork": you are expected to simply have quarterly "check-ins" with your manager regarding your performance. This approach is marketed to new hires as "novel" and "innovative", when in reality the only innovation is that it completely absolves managers from blame when arbitrary decisions are made for (denying) promotions or raises. This all comes back to the nonexistent work-life balance that you will be faced with if you have any ability to write code. Due to the lack of accountability, and the ping-pong'ing of project ownership, other team's projects will suddenly land in your lap which you are now expected to maintain, due to yet another "re-org". You will be pinged at midnight for an urgent bug-fix so that your manager doesn't get chewed out by his manager (deliberate use of the male pronoun here, because female engineers are near nonexistent, much less female engineering managers). And when the dust settles, all of your work will be taken for granted as being simply "part of the job" because there's no paperwork associated with how much you bust your balls to get things done. Your only hope of ever achieving any career advancement is how much you've managed to make your manager like you, and so begins the toxic cycle of only promoting those who can suck up the most. It's quite a pity. And of course, there's exceptions to the commentary mentioned above (once in a blue moon, someone competent gets promoted). But the day-to-day still wears on the psyche of any sane person, and until upper management acknowledges these all to be real problems, there will be no hope for improvement.

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Unity Response
8y
Thanks for providing your candid feedback as it’s the only way we can continue to improve. Let me tackle some of the points. First - We don’t write fake reviews or lie—ever. Glassdoor reviews are authentic reviews, and they highlight the fact that most employees have a positive experience at Unity. When a negative experience is escalated to my team, we try to fix it quickly. We are committed to making Unity a great place to work for everyone. I encourage you to reach out to me directly so I can help solve the pain points you mention—completely confidential. Second—We have many female engineers and like most tech companies, are putting plans in place to hire many more. It sounds like you are on the Monetization side of the business where two of the four Vice Presidents are female. I’m also proud to confirm that many the leaders heading up departments across Unity are in fact, women. Re: work-life balance. We manage a live network and are committed to responding to any disruption in service immediately. Yes, for some roles, that does require off hours work from time-to-time . However, if you are working long hours or weekends on a frequent basis, this is exactly the thing you should raise to your manager to solve because this is not the work life balance we expect nor want for our employees. If you’re not comfortable raising this with your manager, then I encourage you to loop me in. It also deserves to be pointed out that we’re in the process of deeper manager training that continues to fine tune how managers deal with tough conversations, including how best to have the compensation/promotion conversation. Thanks, Elizabeth Brown
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