Good Ol' Boy company showing its age - Anonymous employee SAS Employee Review

2.0
Sep 2, 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Very smart people working on cutting edge analytics technology. - Nice campus and great break and lunch rooms - Dr's office and pharmacy on-site - individual offices - great place for a recent graduate to become familiar with analytics and big business (but best to plan your exit after 2-3 years if you ever want to pay off your student loan) - work with fortune 100 and fortune 500 companies solving real business problems

Cons

- very little opportunity for advancement, promotion, or recognition (unless you're in the right cliq) - lot's of people just coasting until retirement - old-guard are very embedded, and their dated ideas are blocking innovation and development - salary is pitiful compared with similar companies - particularly when looking at salary growth over time - while SAS touts their benefits, really they are on-par with what is available from other organizations in the same industry sector - quite a number of "Dolores Umbridge" wannabe's in leadership positions. If she's your favorite Harry Potter character, you'll fit in fine - very cultish in culture. you're either in or you're out - staff have unwarranted feelings of superiority over peers from other organizations - no communicated succession plan, and no expected employee win-fall should the company ever go public - due to SAS' reputation of being a "lax place to work", hard to be taken seriously by other companies when interviewing elsewhere

Explore other reviews about SAS

5.0
Jun 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Got laid off because of downsize

Cons

Best company to work for and I still miss my coworkers and managers.

2.0
Jun 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits: health coverage, on-site gym, childcare, healthcare center, and more. Work-life balance: predictable hours, flexibility for parents and a culture that doesn't expect you to grind 60-hour weeks.

Cons

Compensation lags the market, slow career advancement and promotions can take years. Change-resistant culture and new ideas move slowly. Leadership team manages up to just one person.

3
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