Not worth it at all - Technical Account Manager Rippling Employee Review

2.0
Nov 20, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company is stable and is too big to fail. Some managers are great but there are really unqualified and bad people in leadership.

Cons

The pay is low and they’re proud of it. One of their core values is being frugal but they don’t spend any money on their people. Zero perks or benefits outside of unlimited PTO. The product is bad and customer support is even worse. You are set up to fail with the bad product, bad engineering and support. You spend all day cleaning up other team’s messes. The department level leadership dynamic is….interesting. I have faith in the company succeeding but little faith in the TAM organization.

Explore other reviews about Rippling

5.0
Apr 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great place to work, lots of room for growth and to build out

Cons

Can't think of anything, N/A

3.0
Jan 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Smart, capable peers who care deeply about customers • Strong product with real market pull • Immediate exposure to complex customers and high-impact work

Cons

Extreme scope creep: The TAM role absorbs work from multiple functions without title, pay, or staffing adjustments • Impossible expectations: TAMs are expected to be experts across dozens of products and industries with inadequate training, documentation, or support • Renewal accountability without ownership: TAMs do the work that determines renewals — technical execution, risk mitigation, escalations — while credit and compensation sit elsewhere • Compensation regression: Pay bands have tightened while responsibility, accountability, and stress have increased • Intentional understaffing: Senior leadership has publicly stated that teams are deliberately understaffed as an operating strategy, despite clear downstream impacts on workload, burnout, and attrition • Consistently poor work-life balance: Escalations routinely spill into nights, weekends, and personal time • Micromanagement culture: Activity is closely monitored, second-guessed, and retrospectively critiqued regardless of outcomes • Deflection instead of solutions: Structural concerns about workload and sustainability are met with “be a team player” rhetoric • External-first leadership with rapid churn: Leaders are hired externally rather than developed internally, then quickly cycle out once exposed to the scope, pressure, and lack of structural support — leaving teams beneath them to absorb the fallout • Unrealistic ramp: New hires are expected to learn an enormous product surface area while carrying full production scope • Attrition as a multiplier: Departures immediately increase load on remaining team members, accelerating burnout • Low morale: Teams are exhausted, disengaged, and actively planning exits

10
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