Cloudera reviews

4.1

81% would recommend to a friend

(1,272 total reviews)
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Charles Sansbury

79% approve of CEO

64% positive business outlook

Cloudera has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 1,272 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Cloudera employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
Apr 27, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of parking available in HQ Some competent individuals are still left

Cons

First/second line managers: Some managers really do not recognize the talent they have in their hands and in this environment they cannot afford to lose even more of their best workers. On the worst teams a handful of people are doing the majority of the work…and these are the exact employees that the worst managers are either bypassing for promos or completely alienating. Most high-performing employees I know are dissatisfied with their role/comp/manager and looking to find a better role elsewhere. There is disincentive to produce quality work when it's the yes men and those with a ton of outside help who are getting the big promos and recognition. Even worse is seeing the incompetent managers enabled with even more resources and recognition that empower them to keep making the same mistakes that have driven away all the high performers and swung the door wide open for incompetence to take over this workplace. Be "open": The company is not open despite the “open company“ facade it tries to project to employees. It's sad when there is more transparency found reading the company's mandatory SEC filings…case in point the last 10k…than at the company's all hands. The kool-aid HR is telling managers to force feed their employees during this company turmoil is a big joke. They are in complete denial and don't realize that good managers cannot trickle down bogus HR talk to the ICs when they themselves have the exact same concerns and questions that HR comms are not addressing in their comms around comp and other topics. Merger: This company is just a couple years away from becoming a b-school M&A course case study on results when mergers are rushed and corners are cut. We all hear these great stories internally and externally about how well the merger is going, wanting to integrate products/systems as fast as possible, logical pairing of 2 companies, etc…but how much is it costing us, and is it really going well? We've lost count how many of the competent people have left, and months after merger we still see crowds of consultants dressed in fancy clothing. There's supposedly a team working on the post-merger integration, but I don't feel like we get many substantial updates about what they're accomplishing - goes with the "openness" from above. Management seems to know but refuse to acknowledge that employees are frustrated that their postmerger workload has increased, comp has gone down -why stay when other companies will pay higher base and not have a stock price that has fallen when the entire market hasn’t- and nothing is being done to address the culture clash after the merger. Reality is, the Hortonworks and Cloudera employees have different working styles. It feels like a culture free-for-all right now - what exactly is being done and is there even an actionable strategy to close the gap beyond "training to deal with change“ and free t-shirts? I've had hours sucked away in meetings so some opportunistic people can quickly stake their post merger power, and the company enables this behavior to continue by doing nothing about it. I have reached the point where I am no longer paid for a job that I was hired to do because my time is sucked into a political mess. I dread going to work every day and I’m sure many others do as well.

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Cloudera Response
7y
Thank you to the writer for posting these thoughts. We know that this stage of the merger is not easy. As a leadership team, we anticipated a period of peak disruption and launched our employee survey quickly so we could identify and address issues and “hot spots” right away. Merging two companies together at such a fast pace has and will create challenges for individuals, teams,infrastructure. We are listening, and we are moving through these issues as quickly as we can. Based on feedback received from the survey, we are sharpening our focus on areas you’ve highlighted. At the company level and within departments, we are working to maximize communication, specifically on our go-forward strategy and merger integration news. The leadership team is also using the survey results to pinpoint specific interventions needed for their teams and employees. Bringing two different cultures together during this period of uncertainty is a challenge, and we are building toward a healthy “new Cloudera” culture that reflects the empathy and teamwork we’ve committed to in the Cloudera Code. To the writer of this review: please bring your concerns forward to someone who can help you with your current situation. There are many ways to raise your concerns so that they are actionable for you as an individual: Cloudera’s anonymous hotline, the open door policy (you can go to any leader, not just those in your leadership chain), your HR Business Partner or me. No one should dread going in to work and we want all employees to feel supported through these changes. Respectfully, Britt Sellin SVP Human Resources Cloudera
1.0
Apr 22, 2019

Welcome to the new CloudError

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

HDP, HDF and Data Plane. Hortonworks platform addresses enterprise customer requirements in a way Cloudera was unable to achieve.

Cons

The loss of Hortonwork’s leadership. Cloudera leadership, vision and internal controls are severely lacking and or inexperienced.

3.0
Apr 18, 2019

Good place to work, needs a clear path forward

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great talents in the company Good perks

Cons

Product direction since the merger was seen as not in stone for a while which led to multiple customers and prospects wait for a while to decide what to do. Need better product differentiators compared to cloud first party offerings. Higher management is clearly moving to using lawyers to stop the flow of good people out the door

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