Glassdoor reviews

3.9

66% would recommend to a friend

(1,113 total reviews)
avatar

Owen Humphries

84% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

Glassdoor has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 1,113 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Glassdoor employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
5.0
Aug 21, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Glassdoor is the best place I've ever worked and somewhere I love to be everyday, regardless of the challenges. We are led by an amazing CEO and a top-notch leadership team full of real people who roll up their sleeves, work hard, and really care. It's challenging, it's fun, and it's rewarding. The entire Glassdoor team is passionate, kind, humble, and smart. People generally remain optimistic and "find a way" in the face of any challenge. When a company is doubling or more year after year, there are a lot of challenges scaling the business. We are having many of these challenges, and we've made some pretty big mistakes this year, especially in the GTM organization. Challenges and mistakes will happen at any growing company. It's how you handle these challenges and mistakes that matters. I think this leadership team is handling the pressure extremely well. I've seen many companies going through these types of pains disintegrate. They've become paralyzed, reactive, political. The exact opposite is happening right now. Leadership is coming together, working together, staying calm, and solving problems quickly. I've never been more proud or honored to be part of this team. The problems we are having right now are temporary, most of them are not systemic. Some of them are self-inflicted, others are due to late investments in critical areas, but they are on the path to being solved. I frankly think our challenges were bigger a couple of years ago. Our product efforts weren't scaling, we had virtually no operational expertise in the company, the company was very divided between consumer and B2B, and there were some key leaders in place that were not a culture fit and were making poor decisions. The leadership listened to the feedback then, and we have solved many of these issues in a very short period of time. Our product team now has great leadership, our business operations team is making a big impact, and we have the right leaders in place. Our CMO and other leaders have done a great job bringing both sides of the business together and working in harmony. I'd pick Glassdoor on its worst day over just about any company on its best day. Solving the challenges of a rapidly growing company is what gives meaning to the work. Solving them with great people is like nothing I've ever experienced.

Cons

It's inevitable that a company will make mistakes or under-invest in certain areas when growing at our pace. You can't throw money at everything at the same time. When working at a company that is growing this quickly, it does take patience as we have to make tradeoffs in our investments in order to be fiscally responsible (and we are that, which I truly appreciate). We've had some bad luck in certain areas along the way too. We are now making the right investments business operations, product development, and user growth. In my opinion, key areas we now need to work on are: 1. Modeling. We still need to improve in how we financially model and measure our business. I think we have a solid understanding of what drives growth. We need to ensure that all areas of the business are delivering on the inputs needed to realize the growth we want. Much of this is in the form of product deliverables, user growth, more operational and enablement support for sales, and excellent product performance that commands a higher price point. It's unrealistic to put expectations of large productivity and efficiency gains on the shoulders of our sales reps without other things materially changing to support that. They are working hard, and they are an amazing team who can get more productive with the right investments - but many of those investments have not been made. We also need to fuel our growth in a more balanced way where we are contributing to the growth from many different areas. We lack the basic visibility to understand the key levers in the model and where we are/aren't delivering. We're too big for that - we've just got to fix this. 2. Sales Operations/Sales Tech. We all know we are short-handed here and are hiring as fast as we can, but it's starting to have a real impact on the business. It's becoming painful and it's becoming a frustration and causing a morale problem because we want to move quickly and efficiently and we can't. Our operational structure was built when we were small, and has not scaled well with our growth. It's not just technology, it's also business processes. Breakages of both are occurring more and more frequently and are starting to have a real impact on the business. We've got to get serious about this and put the right structure in that can accommodate the current business and grow and scale over time. 3. Investment in our Sales Team. We've grown this team to the point where it's not about just getting it done out of sheer will and scrappiness. We need to shift gears and realize that we have a large, global sales team and we are under-invested in many areas needed to support this team. Our leaders have such aggressive hiring to do that they don't get to spend enough time with their teams. They need help. They also do not have the reporting or playbooks they need at their fingertips to manage their businesses efficiently because no one has had time to build those things. And many business and sales processes have not been clearly defined. Finally, our sales enablement is very light for the amount of catchup that we have to do. We need more investment here. We have no way to know if the training is sticking - and in a lot of cases it is not. This is nothing against the sales enablement team - they just do not have the resources to get the job done properly and they do not have enough input from leadership as to what the proper sales/business processes should be in the first place. Sales reps, SDRs, and Sales Managers are overloaded with so much information and so many constant changes that many of them do not know how to effectively utilize our latest system and processes, which makes it difficult for them to succeed. We are leaving a lot of money on the table due to the lack of investment here.

avatar
Glassdoor Response
9y
I want to acknowledge your concerns. As you know, these are issues that we are working through. I feel good about the changes we're already making but it is painful in some parts right now. I don't think these are systemic problems. I think that our level of scale is revealing what's not working much more quickly than if we were growing at slower rates. That's not a bad thing, but it does requires us doing things a different way, and that isn't easy. Companies aren't great because everything is perfect. They are great, because they identify opportunities for improvement, address things head on, and continue to push boundaries. They stay calm, create a plan and deliver value. That's what we're doing. That's what we'll always do. Thanks for the review
1.0
Jul 21, 2020

Big joke

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Worked with some really goof people in Chicago - many let go like myself.

Cons

CEO who is unqualified and never should have been running the company. Who put this joker in place? So awkward when he speaks - really know nothing. Why is he still there when 300 of us were let go? He lied to us. A website that is slow and not easy to navigate.

1.0
Mar 13, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice office, great health benefits, good clients, and some really fun coworkers

Cons

I thought this was a dream company but then realized its composed of individuals who are resistant to change and forward thinking. The culture has turned around within a year and now is toxic. People are unhappy and rapidly leaving while leadership continues to distance themselves from problems. We strive to be the best of the best (as we should since we are a review site for companies) but fall short in culture, internal communication, vacation benefits, and innovation. Front line managers and directors are out of touch with the day to day workload and job duties. They are almost never in contact with clients and lack the skill and willingness to support you with internal navigation and problem solving because of system problems. Employees are rewarded for staying quiet and putting their head down instead of welcoming feedback, new ideas, and improving the status quo. Colocation is encouraged by leadership but not enforced for themselves. Without local leadership, the culture will continue to deteriorate. Unlimited PTO removed on 2/1/2020 as we are now hourly employees. Work life balance was one of the main reasons people stuck around. But now more and more teammates are leaving each month. Rollout of this change was poorly communicated caused more disconnect with leadership. CSMs partner with sales to service and renews accounts, however there is a huge imbalance of work between the two teams. They have been working on roles and responsibilities for MONTHS and NOTHING has changed. Again, another way that this team is unwilling to face problems and work on positive outcomes.

avatar
Glassdoor Response
6y
Dear Chicago CSM Thanks for taking the time to share your feedback. It’s clear that you’re feeling frustrated and discouraged by your experience at work, which isn’t what I would want for you. I’m disappointed to hear your experience of the culture. Innovation is one of the core values of the business, so I expect all of our teams and leaders to embrace ideas which help us work more effectively and improve the customer experience. We recently launched the new “Feedback Tool” to surface ideas and potential innovations across all CS teams - no doubt there is room for us to leverage this tool more deeply. If there are specific areas where you believe we’ve not done enough to innovate, please share with me directly - I’d welcome those insights. More broadly, myself and the leadership team have been thinking about reinvigorating the CS culture and will be sharing some updates at an upcoming All Hands. I understand your concerns with the change to PTO plans that were announced in February. I’m also aware that my communication of these changes missed the mark for many people. I’m glad that we have been able to work with HR and address the root cause by establishing an open-PTO allowance for all non-exempt employees across the company. I appreciate that reviewing roles and responsibilities for our Sales and CS functions has taken time. The work involved was significant and has produced a 12-month enablement program to support the change management needed. However, in light of the recent restructure of our go-to-market teams, we’re holding off on implementation until we’ve worked through the operational implications of these broader changes. Thank you again for your feedback - I hope this guidance is helpful. Chris, VP Customer Success
Viewing 52 - 54 of 1,113 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,268 Glassdoor reviews submitted anonymously by Glassdoor employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Glassdoor is right for you.