
Reviews your team won't dread.
Pulse turns the annual performance review — the one everyone cancels and no one believes in — into a weekly 15-minute conversation that managers actually open on Monday morning.
"I dreaded performance review season more than any product launch."
"We were 48 people. I had six direct reports. Every six months I'd spend two weeks in spreadsheet hell trying to remember what happened in January. My managers were doing the same. The whole thing felt performative — I knew it, they knew it, and somehow we all kept doing it."


14 days until deadline. 6 of 6 managers behind schedule. 0 of 48 employees feel prepared.
The first Monday morning that felt like a team check-in instead of a performance tribunal.
Jordan's team started using Pulse's weekly 1:1 template in the first week of February. No training session. No rollout deck. Managers opened it because it asked exactly the right questions — and remembered the answers from last week.
"One of my managers told me she learned more about what was actually blocking her team in the first two Pulse check-ins than she had in the previous six months of Slack messages."
"We haven't had a single 'I didn't see that coming' moment in a review since we switched to Pulse. That alone is worth more than the subscription."— Jordan Reyes, VP People, Fieldnotes
"We were in the middle of a reorg. The last thing anyone wanted was an annual review cycle on top of it."
"We had three new VPs, two teams being merged, and a headcount freeze. I told the CEO we'd skip the cycle this year. He said we couldn't. So I had 18 managers doing performance reviews for people they'd known for three weeks. The results were meaningless — and everyone knew it."


Pulse became the institutional memory the reorg had erased.
When a manager inherits a new team, Pulse surfaces every previous 1:1 note, every goal set and missed, every piece of feedback given. New managers walked into their first conversations already knowing what mattered to each person — not from an HR file, but from 12 weeks of honest weekly check-ins.
"I walked into my first 1:1 with Priya knowing she wanted to be a tech lead and that she'd been frustrated for six weeks about the API documentation. That context would have taken me three months to build on my own."

"At 700 people, our review process had become a compliance exercise. Managers were filling out forms. Nobody was having conversations."

At 720 employees, Meridian had 89 managers. Their annual review process consumed 14,000 hours of manager time per cycle. The data they collected was largely unusable — ratings were inflated, comments were templated, and the whole exercise cost them approximately $2.1M in lost productivity annually.
But the real cost wasn't the time. It was the voluntary attrition. Exit interviews revealed that 68% of employees who quit in the 90 days following a review cycle cited "feeling unseen by their manager" as a primary reason.
They didn't replace the annual review. They made it a formality — because everything real had already happened weekly.
Pulse rolled out to Meridian's 89 managers over three weeks. By week six, managers were spending less than 15 minutes on weekly check-ins — and their annual review forms took an average of 22 minutes to complete, because everything was already documented.
"The number I'm most proud of isn't the attrition rate. It's that 89 managers are still using it every week, without being asked to. That's the real signal."
— Simone Hartwell, VP People, Meridian Software
Every company has a review story they're not proud of. What's yours?
We work with VP People leaders at SaaS companies with 200–800 employees — the ones who've outgrown spreadsheets but find enterprise HR suites suffocating. If that sounds like you, let's talk about what's actually broken.
"My managers are actually looking forward to their 1:1s now. I didn't think that was possible."
"The setup took 20 minutes. The first manager who used it sent me a Slack message the same day saying it felt different."