Do not come here if you are good at coding - Anonymous employee Salesforce Employee Review

1.0
Apr 12, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Brand awareness - outside people know what is salesforce, at least heard of salesforce.

Cons

If you are good at coding then you have no scope here at Salesforce, at least that is the case at most of the teams. You have to use the proprietary frameworks build by Salesforce for Salesforce without any documentation or proper training. Not to mention your interest in learning those proprietary frameworks will go to drain as soon as you realize you have to spend literally hours if not days to test your code in development mode even for one line of code change. You will be working on a monolith where people break the build pipelines every week that can slow you down further. This will not only hinder from improving your skills, it will slowly but surely will drain what ever coding skills you already have. Now the pip culture has taken over the engineering teams. Salesforce has changed their internal rules to make it very easy for managers to pip people. Manager are not required to have any solid proof - just a quip doc written by your manager saying you did not meet expectation is good enough to pip. If Salesforce want to improve the standards they have to first improve the monolith and improve the monetary incentives to the employees like Amazon. Salesforce now has the pip culture of Amazon, minus the big pay checks.

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Salesforce Response
1y
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience. We’re glad to hear you recognize the strength of the Salesforce brand. That said, we’re sorry to hear your time on the engineering team hasn’t met your expectations. We’re continually working to improve our developer experience—from modernizing our platforms to expanding internal training resources—so that our engineers can focus on what they do best: building great solutions. Feedback like yours is critical in helping us identify pain points and opportunities to evolve our tooling and frameworks. We also take concerns about our performance management practices seriously. Your input has been shared with our internal teams for further review. Thank you again for helping us improve.

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5.0
Jul 14, 2026
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Pros

Fantastic culture, cutting edge products, exposure to a huge range of customers, lots of internal development opportunities, good compensation, great benefits, flexible hours,

Cons

The variable compensation for SEs could be better. The nice thing is that so long as you're doing your job well enough, you'll get paid roughly what is advertised, but there are times when going above and beyond doesn't net you much more.

4.0
Jul 9, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I've spent over 8 years with Salesforce in various management and individual contributor roles, all customer or partner facing. Some of the pros: - vibrant, fast paced culture - smart, fun, aggressive colleagues - management is focused on latest tech trends and staying or becoming a leader for many of them - by and large, customers and partners are very positive about the technology - good benefits and perqs - hip urban culture at HQ - a chart-your-own-course mentality that rewards those who aggressively seek out the job they want and pursue it, or sometimes even create it

Cons

After my long tenure and many Dreamforce conferences, I'm nearly fried. To say the culture is fast paced and the focus is always changing is an understatement. The reason Salesforce always seems on top, and chasing the latest trend, and in the press, is because employees are expected to run harder, carry more, cheer loudly, and pivot constantly. It's the world's biggest startup in behavior. But at the same time, with the recent influx of top career sales leaders from Oracle and what appears to be a board-level mandate for doubling revenue, employees are being asked to do even more with even less, fill higher quotas with smaller territories, less help, and the big company bureaucracy is rearing it's ugly head. Worse still is the politics. When you hire a bunch of smart, aggressive people, and put them in an environment of outsized expectations, throw in a bunch of re-orgs and changing management, and sprinkle with uncertainty and constantly changing priorities, you inevitably get people back stabbing each other and throwing others under the bus to appear smarter and more worthy of promotion. The few at the top will get very, very rich. The rest will lose the sense of personal ownership and start to wonder why they've given up health and family

782
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Salesforce Response
2y
It's not often that you get the opportunity to respond to a review 10 years in but your comprehensive and thoughtful review has managed to hold on as one of our most popular even a decade in :) It’s exciting to see that the things we love most about the Salesforce of today — super smart colleagues, being at the forefront of tech trends and establishing ourselves as leaders in the space, great benefits and perks to name a few — haven’t changed in the past 10 years. We acknowledge the challenges you faced, such as the pace, shifting priorities, and internal politics. Your advice on maintaining our foundational vision while avoiding big-company bureaucracy is helpful as we continue to grow as the #1 AI CRM. Salesforce is committed to balancing growth with employee well-being and staying true to our core values. We appreciate your insights and dedication over the years. Thanks again for your feedback!
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