HubSpot reviews

3.4

54% would recommend to a friend

(4,171 total reviews)
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Yamini Rangan

63% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

HubSpot has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 4,171 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The HubSpot 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

4K reviews
2.0
Dec 28, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company has a great culture when it comes to "social politics" and belonging, diversity and inclusion, and I hear that things on the direct side of the business have a better overall sales culture, but I have only ever been a CAM.

Cons

Management in the channel is a dumpster fire. They continue to run an enterprise level mindset but with a small business approach. As others have commented, your success has A LOT to do with your partner book - not all books are created equally, but the quotas are all the same. Deal registration and general Rules of Engagement are a joke and offers no protection for the partner so other CAMs can fish through open deals and try to push their partners into the deal. Comp is mess. I could sell the exact same deal to 5 different customers and get paid completely differently on them - 0%, 30%, 60%, 80%, or 100%, but the only way for me to get 100% credit for a deal I sell is to sell it directly to the end user WITHOUT a partner involved... as a Channel Account Manager. 80% if a partner is involved, 60% if the client has a direct rep already, 30% if the direct rep reached out to my partner to engage them, or the dreaded 0% if its an existing customer that you are upselling. Early in 2022 leadership acknowledged a slow start to the year company and industrywide and announced that they would be lowering quotas slightly and relaxing some of the PIP gates to help weather the storm. That is, unless they choose a manager discretion PIP which doesn't follow any of the PIP guidelines (can be for any reason and can be as short as 1 month instead of the 3 month minimum for standard plans which was provided because "This is to allow for enough time to properly coach and improve performance.") Having seen several people terminated in the last few months, even though they didn't qualify for a standard PIP gives the sense that we don't want to lay people off because that looks bad, so we are just going to manage a bunch of people out to cut headcount. Its confusing and disheartening to say the least. It not hard to find tenured people on almost every team that will tell you that "next month I am either going on a pip or getting promoted, depending on if I can get a couple of deals to come in this month".

2.0
Mar 2, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Autonomy, great problem areas to explore, talented people

Cons

Rat-race mentality, high pressure environment, low support from management, autonomy sometimes backfires into process-free chaos

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HubSpot Response
4y
I'm really sorry to hear that you feel things on the product design team are frenetic and feel like a rat race-would of course welcome the feedback we can improve on to create change there via the business partners if you're open to sharing it. Thanks for considering and for your feedback! -Katie
2.0
Feb 17, 2022

The HEART has disappeared

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* Genuine focus on diversity, inclusion & belonging (DI&B) at all levels. * Solid platform infrastructure; most teams can focus on delivering customer value, not writing k8s manifests or how to deploy JVMs. * Generally friendly, knowledgeable, and helpful engineering community. * Solid growth opportunities for early career engineers.

Cons

* The culture has taken a nose dive since the pandemic started. This is less about events (product experience has done a good job here) and more that people seem to forget there's a human being on the other side of the zoom call. Every interaction is transactional and cold. HEART has disappeared at HubSpot. * The company is growing fast and failing to scale. Leadership pushes complex initiatives onto teams without considering all the implications. It feels like they're just trying to pump up the stock price which obviously isn't sustainable in the long term. * Burnout continues to be a problem. There's more discussion about it but very little concrete action beyond no meeting Fridays and the extra week of rest. Executive leadership encourages us to talk about burnout openly with our managers but since doing so I've started receiving critical feedback. * Pockets of middle management in engineering lack management and people skills, but are exceptionally skilled at gaslighting. * There's been an exodus of senior talent in engineering, leadership doesn't appear to want to retain them (even dismissing the idea that we're seeing increased attrition). * The hiring bar in product and engineering has been lowered. In an attempt to get more people in the door, we're not assessing technical ability as closely or screening as thoroughly for culture-add. We've hired some toxic people recently simply because they had impressive company names on their resume. * Politics runs rampant: the best ideas don't win anymore and promotions are handed out to the most visible and connected individuals, not the ones who are most qualified. * The Tech Lead role is a trap. On paper there is upward mobility to Engineering Lead, but the fact is you'll be so overworked that you'll never develop skills and meet the bar for promotion. There is no mentorship available for Tech Leads.

Viewing 235 - 237 of 4,171 Reviews

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