Overall employee rating

3.0
Based on 9 reviews
5
4
3
2
1
Detail Ratings
Work life balance
3.0
Career Growth
3.0
Work flexibility
4.0
Job Security
3.0
Pay and benefits
3.0
Leadership
2.0
Company Culture
3.0
Disclaimer: Reviews on Jobstore are independently submitted by users; we do not guarantee the accuracy or truth of any individual submission. Read more
Product Designer
3.1
6 April 2026
Solid culture for design folks, but can improve
Pros: The design team here is super collaborative. You really feel supported as a Product Designer, which is great for creative work. We often share ideas freely and help each other out.
Cons: Upper management can feel a bit disconnected from the ground level. There's a 'work hard, play hard' vibe that sometimes leans too much on the 'work hard' side, leading to some burnout. The San Francisco office can feel a little siloed from remote teams, affecting overall cohesion.
Advice to Management: Listen more to your ICs and mid-level managers. They know what's happening on the ground. Also, try to foster a more inclusive culture between the onsite and remote folks to truly feel like one team.
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UX Researcher
3.0
25 February 2026
Decent culture for UX professionals here
Pros: The people are genuinely collaborative, especially within our UX design teams. It's a supportive environment for UX researchers learning new methodologies. Plus, the hybrid work model from our Seattle office is a nice perk.
Cons: Sometimes, the company culture feels a bit too corporate, not really like a startup. Leadership communication can be inconsistent, making it tough to see where we're headed. Recognition for individual effort in this tech industry is hit or miss.
Advice to Management: Focus on clearer communication from upper management. Also, try to implement more consistent ways to acknowledge individual contributions across all teams, including for our remote UX designers.
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UX Designer
3.0
21 February 2026
Fast-paced, but job security shaky for remote roles
Pros: The projects are actually pretty cool and challenging for a UX Designer. I got to work on some innovative digital products with a really smart team. The daily work itself is engaging and you learn a lot quickly.
Cons: Job security isn't the best here at this tech startup. There's a lot of churn, especially for some design roles, which makes you constantly feel on edge. They seem quick to downsize if a project isn't immediately hitting targets, making remote employees feel even more vulnerable.
Advice to Management: Try to be more transparent about the company's financial health and future plans. More consistent communication could help ease the constant worry about layoffs and improve job security perceptions, especially for your remote teams. Focus on retaining talent, not just acquiring new.
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Latest jobs from TigerUX

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UX Designer
2.9
21 February 2026
Culture is okay, but team makes it better
Pros: Working as a UX Designer here, I've met some really smart people. Team collaboration on product design is pretty solid, everyone helps each other out. It's cool being part of a remote team in the tech industry.
Cons: The overall company culture feels a bit inconsistent. There isn't always clear communication from upper management, which can be tough. Sometimes decision-making takes way too long.
Advice to Management: Try to provide more clarity and consistent messaging from the top. It would help a lot with team morale and overall company culture, especially for our distributed remote workforce.
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UX Designer
2.9
17 February 2026
Leadership needs to step up at TigerUX
Pros: I liked working on real-world user experience challenges. For UX design roles, there's a good chance to own projects end-to-end. The San Francisco office culture was pretty laid back too.
Cons: Leadership here is often disconnected from daily work. Decisions felt random sometimes, with little input from actual designers. It made product strategy tough to follow for us individual contributors.
Advice to Management: Try to be more present in team meetings and understand the project realities. Get actual design leads involved in high-level product strategy. Transparency helps everyone.
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UX Designer
3.0
31 January 2026
Decent for starting, limited long-term growth.
Pros: You get good exposure to different projects and product lines early on. It's fine for skill-building as a UX Designer. There's a decent mentorship program for junior staff, which is helpful in the tech industry.
Cons: Career growth isn't great. Promotions are slow, and there aren't many senior design roles opening up. You can hit a ceiling pretty fast here, especially in the Seattle office.
Advice to Management: Focus on creating clearer career paths for experienced UX Designers. Invest in leadership training for managers so they can actually support growth, not just manage tasks.
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UX Designer
3.0
30 January 2026
Decent Work-Life for UX Designers, but Has Its Moments
Pros: I've generally had decent work-life balance here. As a UX Designer, I can usually wrap up by 6 PM, which is good for a tech startup in San Francisco. There's also some flexibility for hybrid work, letting me WFH a couple of days.
Cons: Crunch times before major product launches can be rough. It's not uncommon to pull 10-12 hour days then, especially for core product design tasks. This inconsistency makes planning personal life tough during peak periods.
Advice to Management: Try to smooth out project deadlines. More realistic timelines would really help avoid burnout for the design team.
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UX Designer
3.0
28 January 2026
Okay Work-Life, Can Get Busy Sometimes
Pros: I like the hybrid work setup. It helps me manage personal appointments easily. As a UX Designer, I appreciate not being totally tied to the Austin, TX office five days a week. We get decent PTO too, which is a plus.
Cons: Deadlines can be super tight, especially on big digital product design projects. Sometimes it feels like there's an expectation for after-hours work, which isn't great for work-life balance. It really depends on your project lead and current sprint demands.
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UX Designer
2.9
14 January 2026
Leadership Can Be a Mixed Bag at TigerUX
Pros: I liked that as a UX Designer, I had a lot of autonomy on early design projects. My direct manager was usually supportive and let me own the user experience for new features, which was great for my portfolio. The WFH setup is solid.
Cons: Senior leadership struggled with consistent communication. There's often a lack of clear strategic direction, making product development tough. It felt like they changed their minds a lot, which impacted project timelines and morale for the team. This made it hard for a mid-sized tech company to really push forward.
Advice to Management: Need more consistent vision from senior leaders. Focus on clear, stable strategic goals for product development and communicate them better across all teams.
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