FDE Work-Life Balance: An Honest Assessment
Let's talk about what nobody puts in job descriptions. The FDE role offers incredible compensation and career growth — but it comes with real costs that you should understand before accepting an offer.
The Data
Company
WLB Rating (Glassdoor)
Avg Weekly Hours
Travel %
Burnout Risk
Palantir FDSE
2.7/5
50-60
30-50%
High
Databricks FDE
3.5/5
45-50
20-30%
Moderate
Scale AI FDE
3.3/5
45-55
15-25%
Moderate
Anduril FDE
3.0/5
50-55
10-20%
Moderate-High
Stripe FDE
3.8/5
42-48
10-15%
Low-Moderate
MongoDB SE/FDE
3.7/5
42-48
25-35%
Moderate
HashiCorp FDE
4.0/5
40-45
15-20%
Low
The Travel Reality
What "30% Travel" Actually Means
On paper: ~6 days per month on the road
In reality: Some months are 0%, others are 80%. It comes in waves.
What drains you: Not the travel itself — it's the unpredictability. Hard to plan life when you might get sent to a client site next Tuesday.
Travel Tiers by Company Type
Heavy Travel (30-50%): Palantir, traditional consulting-style FDE
You'll be embedded at client sites for weeks at a time
Flight status and hotel points accumulate fast
Hard on relationships and personal routines
Moderate Travel (15-30%): Databricks, Scale AI, Datadog
Monthly or bi-monthly client visits
Most work done remotely with scheduled on-sites
Manageable with planning
Light Travel (0-15%): HashiCorp, dbt Labs, remote-first companies
Mostly remote customer engagement
Quarterly QBRs or kickoff meetings
Best for people with families or location preferences
The Burnout Factors
1. Context Switching
The #1 burnout driver for FDEs isn't travel — it's context switching between clients.
Typical Senior FDE load: 2-3 active client engagements simultaneously.
Monday: Debug a data pipeline issue for Client A (healthcare, HIPAA constraints).
Tuesday: Architecture review for Client B (fintech, real-time requirements).
Wednesday: Present project update to Client C's executive team.
Thursday: Back to Client A — they escalated overnight.
Friday: Internal planning meeting + documentation for all three.
Each client has different tech stacks, different stakeholders, different urgencies.
2. The "Hero Culture" Trap
FDEs are often seen as the fixers — the ones who swoop in and save the engagement. This creates:
Pressure to always be available
Difficulty saying no to customer requests
Scope creep that your manager won't push back on because the customer is "strategic"
3. Ownership Without Authority
You're responsible for deployment success, but you don't control:
The customer's infrastructure decisions
Their data quality (always worse than they claimed)
Internal politics at the customer org
Your own product's roadmap
4. Distance from Core Product
FDE work can feel disconnected from the main engineering org. Your contributions are customer-specific, making it harder to:
Get recognized in engineering-wide promotions
Contribute to open-source or public-facing work
Build a portfolio that transfers to other companies
Strategies That Actually Work
Managing Travel
Negotiate a travel cap in your offer. Get "max 30% travel" in writing.
Batch client visits. Two clients in the same city? Schedule back-to-back.
Protect anchor days. Block 2 days/week as non-travel days. Communicate this to your manager early.
Invest in travel comfort. Noise-canceling headphones, TSA PreCheck, airline status, a good carry-on. These aren't luxuries — they're tools.
Managing Burnout
Set client communication boundaries. No Slack after 7pm. Emergency-only phone calls on weekends. Enforce this from day 1.
Document everything. Reduces the "only you know how this works" trap. Makes it easier to hand off and take vacation.
Rotate clients periodically. Push for 6-9 month engagement cycles, not indefinite assignments.
Build internal relationships. Don't become isolated. Attend engineering all-hands, contribute to internal tools, mentor junior FDEs.
Managing Career Growth
Track your impact quantitatively. "Deployed system processing 50M records/day" > "Worked with Client X"
Write internal blog posts about your deployments. Visibility matters for promotion.
Push for speaking opportunities. Conference talks, webinars, customer case studies — these build your personal brand.
Set a career timeline. Most FDEs stay 2-4 years before transitioning. Know what's next.
When to Leave an FDE Role
Red flags that it's time to move on:
You dread Sunday evenings because of Monday client calls
You haven't learned anything new in 6+ months
Your manager can't articulate your promotion path
You're doing more account management than engineering
Travel is affecting your health or relationships
Common Exit Paths
Next Role
Why It Works
Comp Impact
Senior/Staff SWE
Deep IC work, no travel
Lateral or -10%
Engineering Manager
You already manage stakeholders
+10-20%
Product Manager
Customer empathy is your superpower
Lateral
Solutions Architect
Same skills, less travel
Lateral
Startup Founder
You've seen 100 customer problems
Variable
Field CTO
Stay in FDE, go leadership
+20-40%
The Verdict
The FDE role is one of the best career accelerators in tech — for the right person, at the right time. The comp is elite, the learning curve is steep, and the customer exposure is unmatched.
But it's not sustainable for everyone long-term. The best approach: go in with clear goals, set boundaries from day 1, and plan your timeline.
What's your experience? Share your WLB reality below — the honest stories help people make better career decisions.