employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Clearwater Analytics (CWAN)

Engaged Employer

It's A Shame What Has Happened - Senior Software Engineer Clearwater Analytics (CWAN) Employee Review

1.0
Apr 2, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing coworkers. Through all the good and bad times having amazing teammates always made things bearable. Over the years I did have good raises and my compensation was fair for the market.

Cons

It really saddens me to look at the Clearwater that exists today and see how far it has fallen. I was once so proud to work there and so grateful every day to have found such an amazing place to work. However I no longer recognize Clearwater and mourn the loss of what once was. There used to be a flat hierarchy where upper management knew me and I felt they respected me as an employee. I used to feel empowered to do my job and have input on what would make the overall product better. Now there is layer upon layer of bureaucracy where the low level employees have no input and are often found caught between feuding at the top. There were many times I was told one thing by one level of management, but the opposite thing by the next level up. One manager telling you to work on this specific thing and then when you go talk to the other teams needed to make it happen they have been told not to help you. The only thing that matters now is profit and gross margin. The last few years development has been screaming that we need a significant rearchitecture of how we do things and it seemed like goals were made to address ticking tech debt time bombs. Unfortunately those goals were dropped. Things like moving away from our giant monolithic database were pushed off by leadership because that doesn't bring in new money and that is all the private equity holders of the company care about. The company is now paying the price as system stability issues are rampant. Developers are no longer trusted to deploy and must sit through hours of weekly meetings in order to have even a chance to deploy things. It's not uncommon for working and valid changes to take 3 or 4 months to get actually get released because the system is so unstable nothing is allowed out. Work life balance which was once the greatest benefit at Clearwater is no more. Gone are the days of "it's a marathon not a sprint". The system constantly breaks and the greatest load is during night time hours. Employees are up at all times of the night trying to prod data through the system. The employees that receive the greatest amount of recognition now are the ones who spend all night babysitting the aged system like tending to a decrepit grandparent on life support. All upper management ever talks about is how much we are growing and how much money the company is making. The new CTO loves to brag about how many billions the company is worth, but regular rank and file employees that built this company have zero equity and see nothing from record breaking profits every fiscal year. Receiving equity is continually brought up in company meetings by employees and is consistently dodged and avoided. It is demoralizing to realize you are just a cog to be chewed up and spit out to make boat loads of money for an elite few in the company. Morale has never been lower and management does not care. They will create focus group meetings where employees can bring up concerns. No changes ever come from these meetings and employees are just given the some rote answers to legitimate concerns. Being an employee at Clearwater was like being in an abusive relationship where I was constantly feeling like I was being gas lighted to think that there was nothing wrong despite constantly bringing up complaints with management. Here are actual real life examples of questions I asked in public gatherings and the answers I received. Q: "What are you going to do about so many of my colleagues leaving?" A: "Attrition is actually down." Q: "I'm really concerned about morale and have never seen it so low among my coworkers in the years I've worked at Clearwater." A: "Employee satisfaction is high" Q: "I don't feel like I'm getting opportunities to work on valuable projects that make a difference." A: "The majority of teams are doing valuable work." Q: "There are many people who feel our cloud migration plan deadline is unrealistic." A: "Doesn't matter. I'm the CTO and picked a date and it will happen." When I turned in my resignation I was asked why and mentioned the lack of opportunity to do valuable work and that management had told us explicitly to wait on doing things like moving to the cloud or implementing needed new functionality. I was then scolded for not taking charge and just ignoring the same manager and not just doing those things despite management explicitly telling me not to. It honestly felt like leaving an abusive relationship by the end of my tenure at Clearwater which is truly shocking considering how respected I felt just a few years ago. Recently the entire QA department was let go. It was revealed to a group of us by a C-level executive that the entire process of laying off the entire department was botched. There were plans to make a plan to transition away from having QA's on development teams, but a manager leaked early to a QA that the entire department was to be laid off. This forced management to rapidly ramp up the transition plan and there wasn't enough time to properly prepare for letting an entire department that was so integral to the development process go. It has been a mess ever since and the rationale for letting them go was never truly explained. The developers in the Boise office are seen as inferior and not trusted by the brain trust that has formed in Seattle. The new CTO would love to just close the Boise office and move it all to Seattle. All new leadership openings in dev are never offered internally and only hired externally from Seattle. It's very common for teams to be missing team or division leads because they'd rather have nothing than an internal hire from Boise. Clearwater had made so much progress on this front and had developed a good pattern of listing every team lead position opening and allowing internal interviews from many candidates. When my team lead left there was no advertising of the position internally and it was only advertised to external hires in Seattle. There was an all hands meeting where a large list of promotions within the company were shown. Not a single developer was on the list. I asked the question in the meeting why there weren't any developer promotions on the slides and was given the run around. There is a mass exodus of senior developer talent leaving the company and I worry about my colleagues that have been left behind. Those who are talented are leaving in droves and the ones that aren't the cream of the crop are left behind which will make the issues only worse. It became a running joke on our team towards the end on who would be the developer that week to leave the company. Without fail we'd get a company wide email on another developer leaving and lament the loss of such a great talent. If you are a developer and interested in Clearwater please run as far away as you can. There are so many wonderful opportunities in the Treasure Valley. All my former colleagues that left are so much happier. I feel like a giant weight has been lifted off my shoulders now that I've left.

Explore other reviews about Clearwater Analytics (CWAN)

5.0
Jun 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great culture within the firm

Cons

Very fast paced, always changing

avatar
Clearwater Analytics (CWAN) Response
2d
Thank you so much for the kind words and we love hearing that the culture has been such a positive part of your experience as that is something we work hard to cultivate every day! We know the fast paced and ever evolving nature of what we do can be a lot and we truly appreciate the adaptability and dedication our team brings. We appreciate you and wish you continued success at Clearwater!
2.0
Apr 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-casual working environment -some time/location flexibility -excellent exit opportunities at client companies -friendly/young workforce

Cons

-high turnover -declining near term business outlook/increased competition -no pay increase for promotions (seriously) -rapidly offshoring/declining service quality -hybrid schedule, office hours, benefits progressively worsened -executive leadership is detached (in NYC) from main operations (Boise) -delusional AI adoption/mandates -less focus on innovation and development in areas where clients care (rather focused on acquisitions and AI tooling development) -very poor work life balance, long hours/high turnover will leave you behind during month-end (you'll regularly see people online past midnight)

2
avatar
Clearwater Analytics (CWAN) Response
1mo
Thank you for sharing your experience and for the kind words about our culture and the flexibility we strive to offer. We're grateful for the three plus years you dedicated to Clearwater and the perspective you've brought through this feedback. We hear you on the areas where you feel we can refocus and improve and we take that seriously as we work to continuously evolve and grow as a company. We wish you nothing but the best in what comes next!
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All