Close Menu
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending
Trump’s Truth Social Tests AI Search Tool Powered by Perplexity

Trump’s Truth Social Tests AI Search Tool Powered by Perplexity

August 6, 2025
Vibe Coding Is the Future. Just Don’t Trust It (yet).

Vibe Coding Is the Future. Just Don’t Trust It (yet).

August 6, 2025
The Top 20 Companies That Hire for Work-From-Anywhere Jobs

The Top 20 Companies That Hire for Work-From-Anywhere Jobs

August 6, 2025
25 Tips for Saving Money If Your Budget Is Stretched Thin

25 Tips for Saving Money If Your Budget Is Stretched Thin

August 6, 2025
Best Mid-Cap ETFs In August 2025

Best Mid-Cap ETFs In August 2025

August 6, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
August 6, 2025 4:18 pm EDT
|
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  Market Data
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Home » What Palantir Culture Is Like, From Employee Videos
What Palantir Culture Is Like, From Employee Videos
Markets

What Palantir Culture Is Like, From Employee Videos

News RoomBy News RoomAugust 6, 20250 ViewsNo Comments

Want to work at Palantir? Or maybe you’re just curious about the vibes at the company whose stock price skyrocketed 600% over the last year?

Well, there’s a whole trove of videos on Palantir’s YouTube channel to dig into— and I did the work for you.

Palantir smashed earnings expectations on Monday, reporting $1 billion in Q2 revenue. In a letter to shareholders, CEO Alex Karp thanked the company’s “unapologetically specific” culture. He analogized the company to an “artist colony,” one that has “plenty of friction and disagreement.”

What is so “specific” about Palantir’s culture? I dug through 174 minutes’ worth of corporate YouTube videos in an attempt to find out.

And while the videos likely present a more polished and curated view of the company’s culture, I still found some interesting takeaways.

Palantir’s “anti-authoritarian” culture

Palantir’s buzzword is hierarchy. The company is divided into micro-teams, and many employees report only to their teammates. One hiring manager said that, for a project that a Big Tech company would assign thirty engineers to, Palantir normally assigns three to four.

In one video, a Palantir boomeranger — one of the company’s 75 employees who left and have since come back — said he only lasted six months working somewhere else.

“I just got so frustrated with how a normal company operates,” he said. “Why does hierarchy matter? Why does process for the sake of process matter? Also, these people aren’t smart or interesting at all.”

When describing Palantir, this boomeranger used words like “funny,” “smart” — and “anti-authoritarian.”

Related stories

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

These stories were common among Palantir employees in the videos. An intern named Aarushi described interning at other tech companies, where hierarchy made her work feel small. Palantir employee Vruthik Thakkar described a previous machine learning job as “oriented around doing things that someone in the hierarchy told you to do.”

Thakkar compared the rigidity of his old job to a marching band. Palantir, he said, was more like a “jazz band.”

The jazz references popped up multiple times. In one, a university fellow explained to Karp that his background in jazz and improvisation helped him with Palantir’s feeling of “not being trapped in a single box.”

Who is the Palantir employee?

Palantir employees have a bit of an informal dress code — at least, judging by their attire in the videos. From what I saw, they mostly wore black, with occasional whites and beiges popping up. Wire-rimmed glasses were popular.

They also lean casual in dress. In one video, an employee described being rewarded for traits like “passion and intensity” that would have been punished elsewhere — while wearing shorts and flip-flops.

On Monday’s earnings call, Karp said that Palantirians who come from universities have “just been engaged in platitudes.” At Palantir, Karp said that “no one cares” about your educational background.

The anti-academia spirit seems to run through Palantir. Multiple employees describe dropping out of college to join the company — in fact, Palantir devoted a whole video to it.

“Now I’m not going to have a degree, where does that leave me?” one employee said. “I’m going to be at Palantir, who cares.”

Other employees reported feeling a loss returning to college after their Palantir internships. Former employee Mark Bissell described his thinking when returning to Williams College: “Why am I doing this? What’s the value of what I’m currently spending my time on?”

No strict job titles, no corporate ladder

When Tiger Cross joined Palantir as a “forward-deployed operations engineer,” he didn’t 100% know what his job title meant.

“I got assigned a mentor who was also an FDOE and he wasn’t really sure what an FDOE was meant to be either,” Cross said. “His main answer that stuck with me was that roles mean nothing at Palantir. Everyone forges their own path.”

Palantir’s freeform, anti-hierarchical culture also means loose job titles and teams. Employees across videos described being able to jump project-to-project and tackling issues from abstract positions.

One boomeranger described being frustrated with how the “pendulum would swing” every few years, entirely reorienting the company’s direction. She said she later realized it was the cost of experimentation.

What unites the company, then, appears to be a love of Palantir itself.

A recruiter named Verity described their ideal employee as “low ego people that really care.” When Patrick Howard began referring people for Palantir roles, he looked for “people who only want to be here, and are obsessed with it, and want to throw their whole weight behind it.”

Howard described other positions in tech as “very very relaxed,” where Palantir employees “take on the world,” and must “put in the work to do that.”

For some people, that culture doesn’t stick. John, a Palantir recruiter, said that applicants looking to climb the corporate ladder should “go and apply to Big Tech.”

“The reason that people boomerang is the same as the reason people leave Palantir after six months and hate it and never come back,” one boomeranger said. “We don’t do mentorship. We don’t do career progression. Everything has to be oriented in first-principles thinking.”

Have a tip or story to share? Contact the reporter from a non-work email and device at hchandonnet@businessinsider.com



Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Vibe Coding Is the Future. Just Don’t Trust It (yet).

Vibe Coding Is the Future. Just Don’t Trust It (yet).

I Traveled Around Europe to Find the Best European City to Live in

I Traveled Around Europe to Find the Best European City to Live in

As Search Becomes an ‘Answer Engine,’ a Prince Fights to Save the Web

As Search Becomes an ‘Answer Engine,’ a Prince Fights to Save the Web

Former Point72 Intern Sues Over Disability Discrimination

Former Point72 Intern Sues Over Disability Discrimination

We Vacation in the Same Rental Every Year; No Regrets, Family Loves It

We Vacation in the Same Rental Every Year; No Regrets, Family Loves It

White House says Apple to announce 0 billion US investment

White House says Apple to announce $100 billion US investment

Inside Marble House, a Gilded Age Vanderbilt Mansion

Inside Marble House, a Gilded Age Vanderbilt Mansion

Starting Next Year, You’ll Be Streaming Disney+ and Hulu From the Same App

Starting Next Year, You’ll Be Streaming Disney+ and Hulu From the Same App

10 US Cities Where Renters Get Big Apartments for Cheap Prices

10 US Cities Where Renters Get Big Apartments for Cheap Prices

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Vibe Coding Is the Future. Just Don’t Trust It (yet).

Vibe Coding Is the Future. Just Don’t Trust It (yet).

August 6, 2025
The Top 20 Companies That Hire for Work-From-Anywhere Jobs

The Top 20 Companies That Hire for Work-From-Anywhere Jobs

August 6, 2025
25 Tips for Saving Money If Your Budget Is Stretched Thin

25 Tips for Saving Money If Your Budget Is Stretched Thin

August 6, 2025
Best Mid-Cap ETFs In August 2025

Best Mid-Cap ETFs In August 2025

August 6, 2025
What Is Home Equity And How Can You Use It?

What Is Home Equity And How Can You Use It?

August 6, 2025

Latest News

What’s the Best Frozen Acai Pack at the Grocery Store, Clear Winner

What’s the Best Frozen Acai Pack at the Grocery Store, Clear Winner

August 6, 2025
I Traveled Around Europe to Find the Best European City to Live in

I Traveled Around Europe to Find the Best European City to Live in

August 6, 2025
Best Short-Term Bond Funds in August 2025

Best Short-Term Bond Funds in August 2025

August 6, 2025

Subscribe to News

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Advertisement
Demo
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
2025 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.