EverCommerce reviews

4.0

76% would recommend to a friend

(385 total reviews)
avatar

Eric Remer

80% approve of CEO

66% positive business outlook

EverCommerce has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 385 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The EverCommerce employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

385 reviews
5.0
Sep 4, 2022

Love it

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great, hardworking people Supportive leadership Opportunities for growth

Cons

MS teams & some of the WFH equipment is not the best.

2.0
Aug 31, 2022

Bad culture, compensation and company outlook

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

EverCommerce’s positive qualities are outweighed by the negatives. If you have an offer to join EC, it can be a great steppingstone because you’re likely to learn a lot in a short stint of time. But if you have other career options – now or later – the alternatives may be better for your career and life. That said, I’m hopeful we can make meaningful changes in the years ahead. We must.

Cons

In this tight labor market, mixing together a mediocre culture, middling compensation and benefits, and no sense of mission (beyond maximizing profits for the executives and investors) is a fatal concoction for any company. Unfortunately, it’s EC’s cocktail by choice. The company culture here is mediocre at best, and the buck stops at the top. There is a real sense that the CEO doesn’t care about anything other than the company’s stock price and the money he makes when it goes up (or, more apropos of late, “ …*loses* when it goes *down* ”). He and a few of the other executives convey a complete indifference or even disdain to the company’s mid- and lower-level employees. No joke: there is literally a separate unmarked bathroom in the Denver office that is only to be used by the top executives, apparently so they don’t have to sit on the same toilet seat as all the little people that work for them. Certainly, there are some managers tying to positively correct the culture, but it’s hard to do that when the top brass aren’t aligned or engaged. Our compensation and benefits are also lacking, except for those at the top. Stories of EC employees leaving for 20%, 30% and even 50% salary increases elsewhere happen frequently, but are always promptly disregarded by management. And the benefits are lackluster as compared to peer companies, including relatively high healthcare premiums, minimal parental leave, and a PTO program that is hard to take advantage of for many people, given our crushing workloads. Employee turnover is a huge issue, and there are few signs that the bleeding is slowing -- perhaps this is intentional: it cuts “overhead.” Finally, and most importantly, the company’s corporate strategy and outlook are dubious. It seems the early company mandate was Grow-At-All-Cost … mostly by just buying as many random companies that loosely fit in a few different industries as we could, with little apparent strategic rationale. Later, the top executives were outed as having a hush-hush side deal that privately made them rich from these acquisitions – before the company went public, every time EC acquired a new company, each of the top executives received a large bonus check (millions and millions of dollars), under the table. Don’t take my word for it; you can look up the exact amounts they were paid in the mere months leading up to IPO by searching for “acquisition bonus plan” in the IPO document that is publicly available. No wonder there was an insatiable urge to buy so many misfit companies before the company went public! And no wonder we haven’t bought many companies since the IPO (i.e., since their sweetheart deal was cancelled). Now these executives are trying to back-engineer a plausible company strategy and peddle it to the market to make sense of the sometimes ill-suited, hodge-podge collection of companies that are inside the bag they are left holding. Based on our stock value at and since IPO, they aren’t fooling anyone. The fallout from all this is predictable: a high stress environment, minimal work/life balance, little sense of loyalty, lots of office politics, high turnover, etc. It’s worth noting that many of the positive reviews on here are either made by EC’s recruiters (think: the same people trying to convince you to accept an offer) or by other employees after they have been pressured to do so by the HR department.

3.0
Aug 21, 2022

No

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They offer Remote positions. Off on Weekends

Cons

No position progression Stressful with being short staffed and no plans to hire more staff Management likes to cater more to senior staff for PTO

Viewing 304 - 306 of 385 Reviews

Glassdoor has 397 EverCommerce reviews submitted anonymously by EverCommerce employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if EverCommerce is right for you.