Braze reviews

4.1

82% would recommend to a friend

(508 total reviews)
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Bill Magnuson

93% approve of CEO

70% positive business outlook

Braze has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 508 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Braze employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

508 reviews
5.0
Sep 23, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Smart, passionate, and collaborative colleagues across every function. Strong culture of learning and professional development with lots of opportunities to take ownership and expand skills. Leadership communicates a clear vision and invests in people and platforms to support growth. Exciting, fast-paced environment where your work has real impact on customers and partners. Benefits are competitive, with good flexibility for remote/hybrid work depending on your team.

Cons

The pace can be intense, and priorities shift quickly and requires resilience and adaptability. As the company scales, some systems and processes are still being built or improved, which can be challenging day to day. Work-life balance varies depending on role/team; you have to set boundaries intentionally.

1.0
Oct 24, 2018

DO NOT get a job here!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good snacks, Competitive pay and ok product

Cons

Mid level sales managers have as much experience as Donald Trump. Managers are all talk, and can never actually do the job themselves. The CEO who is the former CTO is one of the most arrogant geeks you will ever meet. He talks down on everyone who can't code, because he thinks that is what makes him smart, while he has zero people skills and knows nothing about life outside java script. This company is going nowhere no matter what they think. The marketing team does an ok job now after years of being paid to do nothing. Engineers continue to believe their managers about what they are building, but are clueless that these are dumb features that everyone has.

2.0
Jun 1, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

business focus; feature focus; pretty conscientious and earnest (though not passionate nor inspired) workers;

Cons

Too many. I can only comment on the tech organization. I am writing this review to share my own experience and perspectives to serve as a data point. Given Glassdoor's review policy, I cannot really speak of specifics. So the following is rather general observation based on my own experience. Needless to say, one should do his/her own diligence. The tech rank at Braze is very thin and weak. Current CTO, Jon Hyman, is about the only smart tech guy I have met at Braze. But I personally wouldn't rate him past Google L5/6 when it comes to designing scalable, distributed systems (the backbone of the Braze tech). I used to say to my colleagues that the entire Braze tech organization seemed to be a devops team for the CTO, meaning that the technical sophistication and more importantly, how people approach to problem solving, is largely sweat-driven and operation-heavy. There is no foresight. There is practically no architectural thinking. One gets the feeling that everybody only sees what is directly in front of his/her nose. And this problem goes all the way to the top. In a way, it is kinda impressive that Braze managed to glue together a few not so well connected off-the-shelf systems and made a business out of it (by a lot of sweat and never ending cycles of production problems and bug fixes). The rest of the tech org is very, very junior, despite the titles. You should check their LinkedIn profiles. A staff engineer at Braze probably won't be able to get into the top 3 tech companies at any level. I found Braze engineers to lack passion. They are very diligent on the job. But one rarely sees any self-motivated work outside the job. New ideas, new proposals, new PoCs and even new working systems are often met with silence. The quality of tech management is even worse. Again, check their LinkedIn profiles to decide for yourself. I have corrected almost every single project decision of some senior engineering managers and stepped in to rescue every single project even though I was not directly involved. The lack of technical acumen in the management is pervasive, from top to bottom. The management is in my opinion many levels junior than their titles imply. If you are a solid tech, you're likely to work with or report to someone many levels below you in terms of technical judgement and even managerial skills/experience. It can be a very frustrating experience. There is widespread lack of logical thinking; there is very little clarity in thinking. It's appalling. The general attitude is shoot from the hips and "trials and errors," which quickly become very expensive when we are dealing with a live system with many customers. And this problem is not limited to the rank and file. I don't see any ability or desire to mentor engineers (at any level). The recent grads that I have worked with are all poorly trained even though some of them are quite bright or creative and have great potential for professional growth. I think for them, Braze is a terrible waste of time, because there is no one there who is capable of guiding them. If you are SOLID level 5 or above from the usual top tech firms, chances are that you are stronger than almost anyone at the company. But you will probably come in and report to people who are much, much junior to you. And it can create problems in the long run. My observation is that at Braze your influence seems to depend on how close one is to the execs. I have seen weak hands being promoted despite evidence of incompetence. If you think you can bring significant changes to their legacy system -- you will be shocked once you read the code -- you may be disappointed like I was. I have had a very successful tech career and have built systems that are 10-100 times more challenging and/or larger. I knew the tech rank at Braze was very weak just from the interview. But I thought I could help them build more scalable system and achieve big impact here. Yet the CTO wouldn't reach out to me and say, "let's work together." It's a bit mind boggling. The way I see it is that those who joined the company several years ago have built an OK business with a lot of labor (but not much finesse). A new and stronger person would have to contend with them who are already entrenched. For me, the question becomes whether I should devote a few precious years of my life to clean up the mess and greatly enrich existing shareholders while not learning ANYTHING. Yes, you hear me. Braze is the only company in my job history where I learned absolutely nothing and met absolutely no one that I consider above the bar, let alone excellent (technically, intellectually, creative thinking wise, etc). Even at one of the worst place I worked at -- worse than Braze -- I learned A LOT. I consider my time spent at Braze largely a waste of time and a stain on my record. I think as a prospective hire, you should interview them while they interview you. Probe them (including your hiring manager) thoroughly when you are interviewing with them. You should talk to at least the VP level people if you have FB/GOOG or the likes on your resume. And probe them hard. I advise you to check the tech managers' and execs' LinkedIn profiles and see where they have been. It will give you some idea of how strong or weak their tech rank is. Always remember. A hires A and below. B hires C and C hires C and below. I let you decide where they stand.

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Braze Response
4y
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. We are always looking to learn from our current and former teammates to continue to make Braze a great place to work. I’m sorry to hear that you had a poor experience at Braze. There are things we can and will improve from the challenges you faced. That said, sometimes there is mutually not a good fit, and this was the case here. On the crux of your claims - it’s not often in the world of management that we deal in absolutes, but I can say that your hypothesis on the quality of our engineering team is simply wrong. Our system runs at a massive scale, we build a sophisticated product, and our company has been made better each day, month, and year by the great new teammates we’ve added. We’ve built a collaborative and innovative engineering culture at Braze where we pride ourselves on hiring talent that is diverse in thought, experience, and backgrounds. We value each others' opinions, make decisions in a deliberate manner and focus on employee growth and development. Furthermore, your heavy reliance on status symbols - FAANG credentials, LinkedIn profiles, career prestige - is a great example of values we don’t share at Braze. We’re interested in building a great product. We’re interested in working together to learn and collaborate, and to humbly approach improving our product and adding value for our customers. We’re here to build a sustainable, best-in-class culture where engineers work on hard problems, and we offer everyone a seat at the table. If you’re reading this and interested in Braze, we’d love to talk to you. I promise we’re going to evaluate you based on your performance and not your credentials. We’re solving hard problems with a great team. Hope to hear from you soon!
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