HubSpot - Slave Labor - Anonymous employee HubSpot Employee Review

3.0
Jul 17, 2013
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice people Free food in kitchen beer

Cons

-They tell you pay is 50,000 a year- its really ~ 36,000 after taxes. -HR will tell you that quota is always hit. The BDR team has come close to hitting quota once in 7 months...which equates to pay being painfully low. -Lots of cool events happening around the office "Hubtalks" that you have to miss to still hit numbers -Unlimited vacation is the biggest hoax in the world. No one takes days off because you still have to hit numbers. -Everyone on team is miserable and talks about quitting at every paycheck and almost everyday at lunch. -Prepare to work 50 hrs a week (No work-life balance). -About 2 people in this role quit a month (they bring on 4-5/mo) -Unlimited vacation can only happen once you hit a certain promotion (for a week) and you can only take it off if no one else has already asked to take it off.

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5.0
Apr 19, 2026
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CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great place to build career, is generally able to pivot where change is needed

Cons

remote can be tough when first starting

1.0
Jun 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Positive Culture: The people and immediate team members are genuinely kind, collaborative, and supportive. Work-Life Flexibility: A true 100% remote work environment that offers great day-to-day flexibility. Solid Perks on Paper: The benefits package explicitly includes an unlimited PTO policy.

Cons

The "Unlimited PTO" Trap: While the company advertises unlimited PTO, it is impossible to take without penalty. If you take time off, you are still strictly required to make up every single call you missed while you were gone to hit your monthly metrics. Declining Direction & High Turnover: The company has faced a very rough year and is heading in the wrong direction. Morale is incredibly low, and talent is actively draining from the organization—several people are resigning entirely, going on medical leave due to stress, or desperately trying to transfer to different internal teams. Unrealistic, Extreme CSM Metrics: Customer Success Managers are being pushed to the brink by unattainable, rigid KPIs. The role has shifted from strategic relationship management to a high-volume, transactional grind. Current monthly expectations include: 80 calls per month 76% connected call rate for low-usage accounts 50% engagement rate required for at-risk accounts Stagnant Compensation: Despite the extreme increase in workload, micromanagement, and pressure, the annual raise for CSMs this year was under 2%, which fails to align with basic cost-of-living adjustments.

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