Glassdoor reviews

3.9

66% would recommend to a friend

(1,113 total reviews)
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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
2.0
Dec 3, 2019

Constantly Underdelivering, Equating to Constant Disappointment

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Glassdoors culture is absolutely amazing!!! I feel privileged to continuously work with intelligent and innovative colleagues each and every day. The problem is the organization is not innovative enough to keep up with its talent. The benefits and Unlimited PTO are very attractive. More of a "go with the flow" type of personality, is required here. Bubbly, happy, positive people are definitely more favorable. There are many opportunities for growth if you work under a good manager that supports your promotional career trajectory.

Cons

I walked into Glassdoor bright-eyed and bushy-tailed with big hopes, dreams, and plans. SMB Org has slowly starting to dissolve those ones by one. Although a culturally progressive company, it's like Glassdoor is stuck in a strange managerial, technological and structural timewarp. 1) SMB Leadership- there have been many instances where leadership has failed to step up to provide solutions to problems that highly impact the business and our contributors. In addition to not owning up to mistakes or errors that negatively impacted these teams. Underqualified Managers, questionable behaving Directors and an extreme trend of protected nepotism that is discouraging. I have quickly lost faith in Leaderships' ability to move Sales and Customer Success in a direction that more sustainable for clients and colleagues. Lacking grit, lacking innovation, lacking leadership qualities all in all, smooth talkers deflectors and reframers, unchanged Glint Feedback year after year with regular over-promised and underdelivers. 2) HR- is underqualified and ill-equipped to handle difficult conversations and or make difficult decisions. There have been multiple potential legal situations that have been mishandled or miscommunicated. I question their ability to cultivate an obtain psychological safety. 3) FLUFF- there is a lot of caution around communication and tone. There is also a lot of unmeaningful dialogue that occurs frequently that prevent projects from getting done and initiatives or decisions being made. Too many opinions and to much input is sought and given to be decisive and efficient in a timely manner. 4) Comp- Pay is low all around the board. Pay is not competitive to Tech Industry market standards in the bay area according to Tableau. I am 10k+ under-market and many of my colleagues are much more. Ambiguous performance metrics, more often than not negatively impact comp. I came for the culture and not for the pay... but I'm quickly learning that might have been a big mistake. 5) TURNOVER- Chances of inheriting an unhealthy book and performing extreme measures to "revive" it are high. GD is bleeding clients faster than we can gain them. Also, some need to be prepared to have difficult conversations with your clients about you being the 3rd 4th or 5th rep that they have been introduced to that same calendar year due to individuals leaving the business or lost to internal promotions without transition plans. 6) Lack of resources invested and shared throughout the whole org from SMB-ENT. Also severely understaffed. If any of these are red flags for you as an independent contributor, I would move forward with caution.

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Glassdoor Response
6y
Thanks for taking the time to leave a review and share your feedback. I’m glad to hear that you’ve found your colleagues and our culture to be highlights. At the same time, other aspects of your experience so far sound disappointing. From a leadership perspective, I would want you and everyone from across our teams to feel confident in the direction that we’re taking and clear on how your work contributes to those goals. I agree that having the right performance measures is an important part of this, which is why we’ve rolled out new KPIs to our SMB CS team. I’d welcome your feedback on how these can continue to be refined and improved. I can also see how turnover in the team could create potential challenges for you or others. While we have been good at supporting internal mobility (more than half of the transitions in the last year have been internal promotions), it sounds like we need to do better at creating robust transition plans. I’ll work with our Managers to implement an initiative around this. More broadly, I agree that there are areas where we need to invest and improve in this part of our business. Recognizing this, we just hired a new Senior Operations Analyst dedicated to building automations and workflow specifically designed to support our SMB teams and clients. No doubt more work will be needed to up-level our effectiveness as a team and I’d welcome your feedback and suggestions along the way. Please consider this an open invitation to share it with me directly, or pass it along to your Manager. -- Chris, VP Customer Success
2.0
Jul 9, 2014

Wrong people running shop

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The base pay and commission structure is great. If you're in the Sausalito office, the company does everything they can to help you succeed.

Cons

They should have a VP of Sales in place instead of letting marketing teach tenured sales reps how to sell. Every training we were required to go to was pretty much a waste of time. No company wants to know how long you've been in business, how many awards you've won nor do they want to hear about tons of stats you've made up. They want to tell you their problems and hear how your product can solve them. Marketing wants you to talk the clients' ear off. Stop. Your style does not work.

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Glassdoor Response
11y
Thank you for the feedback. We are always looking to improve how we operate. I'm sorry to hear that you didn't find our regular sales training sessions helpful toward achieving your sales goals. We'll continue to seek feedback from the team on how to improve these sessions as well as the overall sales messaging. Note: Glassdoor does have a VP of Sales.
2.0
Jul 11, 2022

After three years at Glassdoor

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It was a worthwhile place to work the first two years I was there.

Cons

n.b. In keeping with Glassdoor's Community Guidelines, I will not use proper names or specific titles to identify individuals I worked for Glassdoor for just over three years. During my first two years, even with all the upheaval the pandemic brought, I enjoyed working for the company. My first two years at Glassdoor lived up to the company's mission of helping people find a job they love at a place they love. I left the company for three reasons: • IT Upper management, specifically director and above • Uncertainty about Glassdoor remaining an independent entity • Workload The last issue, workload, was one that was an issue almost my entire time at Glassdoor. Yes, it was tasking to be expected to keep up a demanding pace of project after project with no time set aside for foundation building or even just to catch your breath. Yes, I believed during my entire time with the company that IT was never fully staffed, especially for the numerous things we were expected to accomplish. But these are not uncommon in IT, and I largely made a peace with it over time. If workload was the only fault of working for Glassdoor I would not have left. This was a contributing factor though, and one that became more grating over time because of the next two reasons. Glassdoor and Indeed are sister companies, both of which are owned by Recruit Holdings. Since the summer of 2020, whole functions and the staff who do them have been moved over to Indeed from Glassdoor by Recruit. When broaching the subject with management, we were told, “No, Glassdoor is not merging with Indeed” but it is hard not to look at the consolidation and not think it could happen to you someday; it was a looming threat. As this consolidation only began happening after Glassdoor cut a third of it's workforce in Spring of 2020, it was hard to be at ease with the state of the company. The primary reason I left Glassdoor was I no longer could work for IT upper management. I worked under the current upper management team for five to 12 months, depending on when each individual started with Glassdoor. After working for their department for this period of time, I concluded that I could not continue to work for an IT organization they were responsible for managing. They are the bosses and get to make the decisions, but I could opt to leave and I did. During my first two years with Glassdoor, I worked under a different management team comprised of an IT Director (who was “detailed” to Indeed for a special project and had not yet returned to Glassdoor by time I had left) and CIO (who was moved over to Indeed in 2021 and never came back, even though they spent a year pretending like he was still involved with Glassdoor) who often, I felt, managed by various forms of chaos. Yes, it could be frustrating at times, but it was workable. With these two individuals, I felt they would at least listen to my or my team's arguments and we could come to an agreement eventually. The team, IT Engineering, would eventually be allowed to do the work in the way we felt best as long as we accomplished the same end goal. With the newer IT upper management, there was seemingly no trust in the staff. Current IT upper management would repeatedly second guess efforts — not just on the larger roadmap things you would expect management to be involved with — but down to specific operational details like date and times announcements would go out or shifting around launch dates at the last minute. Communication within the department was fractured by their actions. They simultaneously balked at participating in regular IT day-to-day discussions and practices and attempted to control and maintain discipline over any communication happening within and coming out of IT. This could be taken as just a difference in personalities, but I felt it did a lot of damage to the feeling of “unit cohesion” IT staff and IT management had previously had. Current IT upper management compounded matters with their constant refrain of “we can outsource that”. AV, networking, systems administration — there was not a function of IT that they seemingly felt they could not ship out. Rather than hiring into the company, building on and fostering the team, they wanted to take functionality away. Of the few projects we tried outsourcing with, the IT Engineering team likely ended up spending more time on administration and cleanup than if we had just performed the work ourselves. Hiring specialists has it's place and can be useful, but this was something different. It also contributed to the belief they did not have trust in the staff. More so than the communication breakdown or the impression the team was being undermined by lack of support, I was most shocked by how they treated my team's manager. Brought in to be the Senior IT Manager, overseeing both IT Support (aka Help Desk) and IT Engineering, she started just a few weeks before current IT upper management but fit in so well it was like she had been there for years. Our manager exhibited Glassdoor's values of grit, transparency and just being a good person. She listened to her team and really considered our feedback. When needed, she told us to stop arguing and just get things done as asked. As a team, we never felt like she was telling us one thing and then turning around and telling someone else in the company something else. The Senior IT Manager was a real mensch. For whatever their reasons, current IT upper management actively worked to make life within Glassdoor uncomfortable for the Senior IT Manager. Everyone on the team detected the palpable dislike they had for the Senior IT Manager. It would show up in interactions during in-person meetings or offhand comments in email or Zoom calls. I personally had never seen upper level executives treat someone below them in the organization in such a petty manner. I felt it was unfair to the Senior IT Manager. I also could not escape the feeling that if they could do it to her, someone in management, what would stop them from doing it to the rest of us further down the line? If you spoke up or questioned them, why couldn't you be the next target? The IT Engineering team brought up all these matters and others with HR as part of our 360 review of current IT upper management in February. There was no meaningful response from the company or current IT upper management. I never felt unappreciated for the work I did at Glassdoor. I was well compensated and received bonuses, and I even received a SMASHIE, Glassdoor's equivalent of “one of the employees of the year” award, in 2021. The team I worked with was nothing but the best. I opted to leave because I did not want to work for this upper management team at a company with such an unset future.

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Glassdoor Response
3y
Thank you for taking the time to share your perspective. I appreciate the thought and detail you put into the review. Let me address your points one by one. Glassdoor’s Go-To-Market partnership with Indeed has led to significant business growth and enabled Glassdoor to invest in a differentiated strategy to support our vision of radical transparency. We value our operational independence because it helps us deliver on our strategy and allows us to opportunistically work with Indeed when both companies’ strategies are aligned. IT leadership strives to align our team’s efforts with the initiatives that support Glassdoor's mission, vision, and strategy. While competing priorities are often a challenge, we strive to balance the needs of the business with our resource level and create opportunities for growth and development across the team through our quarterly planning efforts and discussions about options with the team . Supporting our team’s career development and advancement is one of the pillars of our people strategy. We are happy when our talented team can pursue roles that align with their career ambition. We recognize there have been changes in the leadership across the team and are putting more focus on cultivating an inclusive culture that embodies Glassdoor values of transparency, innovation, GRIT and good people. Thank you again for sharing your perspective and your contribution to Glassdoor’s success during your time here. – Jun Chen, Head of IT and Security
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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.