Snyk
Snyk Career Growth & Development
Frequently Asked Questions
Snyk supports career growth through structured learning resources, hands-on technical experience, peer mentorship and clearer career expectations in parts of the organization. Employees can build skills through formal programs, cross-team exposure and work that pushes them into new areas of developer security and AI security.
- Structured learning and development: Snyk provides employees with an annual education budget, access to learning platforms and time to pursue development during the workweek. One engineering employee said Snyk supports upskilling by “encouraging calendar blocking for learning” and giving employees access to upskilling platforms.
- Career clarity and advancement support: Snyk has defined career-ladder practices in its solution engineering organization, including clear levels, behavioral competencies and technical expectations. A solutions engineering leader said promotion criteria should be “clear, objective, consistently applied and well-communicated,” adding that leaders were trained to have growth-oriented conversations with team members. This approach gives employees more visibility into what strong performance looks like and how advancement decisions are evaluated.
- Growth through real work: Snyk’s growth opportunities also come from practical experience. A strategy co-op described Snyk as “a full-immersion experience,” where early-career employees are “in the room, at the table, and part of the team.” A technical success employee said mentors, networks and professional development programs helped her build technical skills, leadership judgment and cross-team collaboration.
- External signals:
- Learning Culture: Reviewers describe Snyk as a place with “opportunities to learn new skills,” where employees say, “I am learning every day.” (Comparably; Blind)
- Career Growth: Employees cite “reasonable career growth opportunities” and describe Snyk as a “strong resume builder.” (Glassdoor; Blind)
- Mentorship and Support: Reviewers point to “good mentorship and onboarding,” with one employee saying Snyk has a “positive and inclusive atmosphere” with “ongoing learning opportunities.” (Glassdoor)
Bottom line: Snyk gives employees room to grow through formal learning, mentorship, career frameworks and hands-on work in a technical field that continues to evolve quickly.
Snyk Employee Perspectives
What makes your role now a dream job? What do you get to do that you didn’t at other companies?
I love working on developer tools. It’s great being an engineer writing something for my peers in the industry. Customer conversations are engaging and relatable because we all know what it’s like to work with infuriating security products. It gives me a lot of pride to be a part of building something engineers genuinely like to use.
The office culture at Snyk is excellent; the company takes care of the engineering teams well. Because we write code by engineers for engineers, there’s a strong engineering-led culture in the company. The London office, where I’m based, is set up very well to create a productive engineering environment when you’re heads-down and a collaborative discussion space when you’re workshopping a hard problem. Not to mention, top-class lunches, snacks and happy hours help fuel us, too!
What do you think helped you land the job? Were you able to bring any special expertise or project experience that Snyk found valuable?
I really enjoyed my interview process. Compared to other interview processes I was doing at the time, Snyk’s architectural interview was probably one of the best and most realistic scenarios I came across. I was able to really connect with my interviewers, lamenting the hard tradeoffs that you sometimes have to make as you scale systems or migrate to new architectures. Snyk’s interview process comprehensively evaluates both your understanding of fundamental concepts and your ability to apply them. It’s one of the ways we’re building a team of excellent engineers who are brilliant communicators and kind teammates.
What do you think helps engineers move up quickly or be the top pick for a competitive employer? What should engineers seek out if they hope to move up or be hired by their “dream” company?
I’d definitely recommend taking a break from LeetCode practice one week before your interview. Being too focused on getting the “right” answer can distract you from making genuine connections with the people who might be your future coworkers. If you’re considering joining Snyk, make sure you have an understanding of our product or have at least played around with it. Be genuinely curious with your interviewers, and they’ll be equally curious about you!

What makes promotion criteria feel fair and clear — and what evidence supports that?
Promotion criteria should be fair and transparent. They should be clear, objective, consistently applied and well-communicated to all team members. At Snyk, in the solution engineering organization, we defined a career ladder with clearly defined levels and titles, behavioral and technical competencies and what good looks like. Organizations need to clearly outline the responsibilities and requirements of the next-level role so everyone knows what they are aiming for. Most importantly, all team members must have easy and clear access to the promotion criteria and the entire evaluation process. Nothing should be hidden. At Snyk, our leaders were educated on how to socialize and have conversations with their team members to foster a growth mindset. Promotions should also be based on measurable performance metrics and not subjective opinions or favoritism or “time in seat.” At Snyk, within the solution engineering team, we have defined KPIs that we track that include strategic execution, revenue impact, tech win rates and demonstrated competencies. Ultimately, the team member should own their careers, but it is on leadership to give them a platform to succeed.
Which program changed your capability — with what measurable result?
The most impactful learning and development program for my own advancement has been the synergy created by practical experience, complemented by high-quality mentorship and the formal grounding provided by programs like the Harvard Business School learning program on management and leadership principles, two programs I enrolled in at the start of my management journey and the leadership principles principles program a couple of years ago. While practical application offers crucial, real-time feedback and develops intuitive decision-making skills, mentorship provides the necessary context, strategic guidance, and accelerated learning by transferring institutional knowledge and experience. The HBS-style formal education delivered a robust framework of established management theories and leadership models, turning disparate experiences into coherent, actionable principles. This multi-faceted approach ensured for me that leadership development is not just theoretical or purely experiential, but a comprehensive process that builds both competence and confidence.
Practical experiences I’ve had, like leading a difficult project or managing a conflict, is the crucible where leadership was truly forged. The real work revealed exactly what I didn’t know, creating a clear, compelling need for the knowledge provided by the formal program and the advice from my mentors. The structured program, with the Harvard Business School’s focus on management principles and leadership principles, provides the foundational knowledge and analytical tools, especially since it was in a practical business case format, with real-world examples and leadership challenges.
What coaching habit consistently moves careers forward?
Consistently helping people move their careers forward is centered around fostering self-discovery, accountability and strategic action. These habits shift the focus from the coach giving answers to the coachee finding their own path. A good coach resists the urge to jump in with advice and instead stays focused on what the coachee is truly saying, including their emotions and underlying assumptions. Asking open-ended questions is also key to self-reflection. Use questions like, “What is the real challenge here?” or “What do you want?” to help the coachee articulate their goals and identify the root challenge, not just the symptom.
I’ve personally found the “5 Why” method a great way to get to the root cause of the problem. It’s an oldie but a goodie! The method, originally a manufacturing problem-solving technique from Toyota, is a powerful coaching tool I’ve used to help individuals move beyond surface-level symptoms and uncover the root cause of a personal, career or behavioral challenge. The iterative asking of “Why?” fosters deep self-awareness and leads to more sustainable, impactful solutions. I’ve also been a big fan of strengths-based empowerment, like the strength finder’s principle. This coaching method continuously helps the coachee recognize, articulate and leverage their existing strengths and transferable skills to build confidence, which is vital for making smart career decisions. This way helps identify and gently question the self-doubt or negative thought patterns, like imposter syndrome, that hold the coachee back, helping them reframe setbacks as learning opportunities.

Snyk Employee Reviews
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What People Are Saying About Snyk
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Training & Education Access: Snyk operates Snyk Learn with interactive paths in security fundamentals, OWASP Top 10, and AI‑safe coding, and provides an annual education budget with platforms like Learnerbly, Udemy, and O’Reilly. Feedback suggests these lessons integrate into developer workflows and are complemented by internal forums such as Snyk School.
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Growth Culture: Cultural rituals encourage blocking calendar time for study and emphasize values like “Learn Always” and “Forward Thinking.” Feedback suggests defined role ladders and peer learning spaces make ongoing development an explicit practice.
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Internal Mobility: Company materials highlight internal pathways such as the SDR program, cross‑functional opportunities, and a stance to promote from within. Feedback suggests there are early‑career routes beyond engineering and lateral moves across functions.
Snyk's Benefits
Allows employees to pursue continuing education during work hours
Defines roles and sets expectations for success
Encourages knowledge sharing and cross-functional collaboration
Hosts Lunch and Learns
Job training & conferences
Managers hold regular development check-ins
Offers mentorship program
Provides continuing education stipend
Provides formal manager training and leadership development
Provides opportunities to take on expanding responsibilities
Provides personal development training
Provides structured early-career growth opportunities
Provides structured onboarding for new employees
Provides training support and resources for AI adoption
Supports employee-driven initiatives, not just top-down priorities
Documented career progression frameworks
Documented path to leadership development
Encourages lateral mobility to expand skills and impact
Prioritizes promotion advancement based on impact
Promote from within
Provides customized development tracks