Toxic Environment Creates Chronic Burnout - Anonymous employee OpenGov Employee Review

1.0
Mar 13, 2020
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

At the worker bee level, OpenGov attracts kind, smart, and genuinely mission-driven people. Employees tend to be tight-knit as we frequently rely on each other to cope with the difficult environment.

Cons

Burnout is rampant at OpenGov. The always-working culture leaves employees depleted with little energy or time for a life outside of work. In fact, having children was openly frowned upon by an executive in a company-wide meeting. Zac and David are the culture. Their massive egos and intense aggression permeates the whole organization, making an unhealthy environment for most people. If you're considering joining, make sure you're comfortable with fear management. Teams are siloed and there is little communication about the rapid changes in direction. This is largely because the executive team is constantly fighting and can't agree on the same direction. These inefficiencies lead to lost details and duplicated work. The sales team is extremely condescending, aggressive, and bro-y and everyone is expected to pander to them. The rest of the GTM teams are treated as second class. This is the most political environment I've ever worked in. That gets exhausting. There is no onboarding period and you'll be expected to operate at expert level immediately. The intense, aggressive culture is palpable and that tension is a big reason why OpenGov struggles to keep employees, especially women. Through unnecessary fear management, everyone is expected to fall in line or get out. It's extremely common for people to stay a year, vest 20% of their equity, and then move on to a healthier place. The product isn't nearly as easy and intuitive to use as the company claims. This is often a shock to new customers and that burden falls on the customer success team.

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5.0
Jul 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Fast paced, innovative 10x skills faster anywhere than I ever been Ownership Office Culture - Make it what you will

Cons

not for everyone tough but fair

1.0
May 21, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The startup-era culture here was genuinely good — collaborative, energetic, people-first. As the company grew, so did the ego. Leadership lost what made the place work and replaced it with a top-down, my-way culture that has driven out some of the best people.

Cons

I'm writing the review I wish had existed when I was researching this company. Not checking Glassdoor before I started was my single biggest professional regret. Promotion is positioned during recruiting as a near-term, achievable goal. In reality, the criteria are vague, inconsistently applied, and rarely result in actual advancement. KPIs are set at levels that ensure most reps will fall short — creating a perpetual sense of failure that serves management's pressure tactics, not your career growth. Advancement often appears less tied to clear performance metrics and more dependent on subjective favoritism, including maintaining close alignment with or “sucking up to” hiring managers and leadership, rather than merit alone. Transparency is essentially nonexistent. Turnover in the SDR org specifically is high and ongoing, but it’s never acknowledged or addressed internally. Candidates have no way of knowing the full picture going in. One more thing worth knowing: account executives are coached during training to post positive Glassdoor reviews. Please weigh that when you look at the overall rating. “Unlimited PTO” is also not as flexible as it may be presented. In practice, time off appears to be closely monitored and can be restricted, even for high performers, based on internal perceptions of fairness across the team rather than true flexibility or performance-based trust. This makes the benefit feel more like a recruiting talking point than an actual employee perk.

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