Don't go there - werkgeversreview Software Engineer bij Vaticle

1,0
16 okt 2021
Aanbevelen
Goedkeuring directeur
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Pluspunten

Get to experience some niche technology.

Minpunten

High pressure at work. Constantly being micromanaged. CEO yelling at people frequently. Overtime paid with deliveroo only.

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Reactie van Vaticle
4y
Hi, I'm Haikal, the Founder and CEO of Vaticle. Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback with us. I apologise for the experience you've had that didn't seem to be so great. I do completely see where you're coming from, and so I'd just like to share my thoughts and hopefully some additional context. 1) Our work is indeed high pressure in nature. As a small startup working on a database technology used by global companies, the goal that we need to deliver on is definitely ambitious. The maturity and quality of code that's expected of every engineer is very high. Combined with the size of our open source community and commercial clients, the challenge that stands ahead of us every day only gets bigger. There's a lot of code to be written, and they need to be written well. To some of us, we find thrill and excitement in this type of work. However, I can understand that it may not be everyone's cup of tea. I apologise that this was not what you expected. We will continue to communicate this clearly to all future hires so everyone has the right expectation. 2) I can see how you could have felt micromanaged. As the technical founder of a database technology company that is still small in size, my day-to-day role (2021) is still as the company's software architect and lead programmer. In a much larger company, many of us would not expect the CEO to review a junior engineer's code. However, being the architect and lead programmer in a young and small software company, my responsibility today still includes reviewing every line of code that goes into the main codebase, along with the architectural consequences of every code contribution and software delivery. Being a database technology, where software reliability and scalability is of critical nature, these code and architecture reviews need to be performed very thoroughly and rigorously, especially among very junior engineers. I apologise that these reviews, especially those done by the CEO, made you feel micromanaged. We certainly plan to delegate these responsibilities to new lead engineers and architects as the company grows. However, these engineering practices do need to continue to ensure quality across our codebase, which today still needs to be performed by me, the CEO, as I continue to fulfil the role of a software architect and lead programmer. 3) I apologise for making you feel like I was yelling. I have often been told that my voice is a bit too loud at times, but this would be the first time I've been told that I'm yelling. I sincerely apologise for this unpleasant experience. I take your feedback very seriously, and thank you for reminding me of this; I will continue to improve on my manner of speaking. 4) People do get dinner delivered when they work overtime, as well as bonuses. When we do work late at the office, we want to make sure everyone is taken care of. That includes ordering in dinner of whatever the team chooses, as well covering transportation whenever it's needed. However, we don't usually have plenty of overtime; I would say 1 out of every 10 weeks do we have a bit more of a stressful week where we have to run the extra mile. Most weeks, most team members leave at very reasonable times. Sometimes, such as Q4 2020, when we were behind the deadline for releasing TypeDB 2.0 (then called Grakn), we had to really run the extra miles for several consecutive weeks, where for a few weeks, the work spilt to a day on the weekend. In these periods, we pay our team members daily bonuses for their overtime at rates much higher than the base salary. Today (2021), while our company is still young in size and revenue, we don't yet have a formal overtime pay scheme. We certainly hope to implement an overtime pay scheme starting next year (2022). However, for the past few years, since we've started making revenue, we have been able to reward employees for their overtime throughout the year, through salary bonuses, during salary appraisals. We will continue to reward our team members through bonuses for their overtime, and we look forward to implementing a formal overtime pay scheme next year too. 5) The technology stack we work with indeed may feel more "niche" than the general software development ecosystem. Today (2021), the main development language in our team is Java - the most widely adopted language for backend server development. For our build system, we use Bazel: a modern build system built by Google to handle large, heterogeneous, and complex systems. For our client-server communication, we use GRPC: a high-performant RPC protocol built by Google to implement stateful over-the-network library APIs. For our embedded storage, we use RocksDB: a highly performant embedded key-value store built by Facebook. For our Mathematical Integer Programming solver, we use Google OR Tools and SCIP to build our query planner. For distributed systems messaging protocol, we use ZeroMQ. For language parsing, we use ANTLR. For Actor Model distributed systems framework, we use Akka. There are more frameworks and libraries that we use, but the aforementioned libraries paint a picture of what our technology stack looks like. Compared to general software development, these libraries are considered more advanced and definitely "niche". However, when it comes to building low-level "systems engineering" required in building highly scalable databases and distributed systems, these libraries are prevalent, powerful and widely adopted. Mastering these libraries would allow you to grow as a distributed systems engineer, enabling you to work on any underlying infrastructure of internet-scale technology. I hope my comments above help us understand our team and culture with a bit more context. Thank you so much for sharing your feedback, as they will always help us improve. Haikal Pribadi Founder and CEO of Vaticle

Ontdek andere reviews over Vaticle

5,0
30 dec 2021
Aanbevelen
Goedkeuring directeur
Zakelijk vooruitzicht

Pluspunten

Vaticle is a very personable company where the top officers are interested and involved in the success of both their company and the community around them. Building a community of users and technical experts around graph analytics has always been at the core of this company and I expect it will continue to be. Currently, I work as a Data Science Contractor for Vaticle doing custom graph database buildouts for top-tier clients. I think my experience with Vaticle is best demonstrated by a brief story of how I started working with Vaticle and how the relationship has grown. I first met the co-founders Haikal Pribadi (CEO) and Tomás Sabat (COO) at Graph Day 2017. After recognizing a common passion for data encoded in graphs we embarked on collaborative work analyzing PubMed medical literature. Since that time our relationship has grown and they have contracted my group to do a number of buildouts in a variety of domains including bioinformatics food science and cyber security. These buildouts have not only been a source of revenue but also an opportunity for my group to contribute and practice applying graph algorithms in bioinformatics, my domain of expertise. Working with Vaticle has contributed substantially to my growth as a Data Scientist and the growth of my company. They are always available to help and they know their business.

Minpunten

There are very few cons. The only issue I see is that Vaticle is a small startup. This is both a pro and a con, depending on the goals and personality of each employee. Workers need to be flexible, wear many hats, and understand the business thoroughly in order to contribute optimally. Having said that, the company is growing and I expect that it will take on more of the structured aspects of a larger company as it grows.

1
5,0
27 okt 2021
Aanbevelen
Goedkeuring directeur
Zakelijk vooruitzicht

Pluspunten

- An engineering-first company, code quality is prized highly to reduce compounding problems down the line. - Deadlines are flexible in favour of following the technically better path. - Naturally the two above points entail a longer-term strategy for the growth of the product. - Meaningful work. TypeDB is used in a wide range of critical industries, with many users from life sciences in particular. Often the use-cases have very meaningful motives with effects that will be seen in the real world in the coming years. - Strong community movement and events keep engineers connected to the impact of their work. - Employees have a strong sense of ownership over their products, and are given the mandate to follow their noses to engineer the right way, not the get-it-done hacky way. - Will not settle for anyone but high-achievers who mesh well with the culture Haikal has gone to great lengths to define. This certainly means the team is cohesive and you can trust your team members to come up with the goods. - The company has matured a lot over the period I have been employed for, and has learned the profile of employees that will thrive in this environment. - The leadership should maintain the existing culture of pursuing non-hacky code as this is probably the defining feature of engineering at Vaticle, which brings employees great satisfaction.

Minpunten

- Technical prioritisation and relationship with deadlines could be improved. - Self-taught learning required, but not enough resources for consistent mentoring to support this.

5
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