MemoryBlue reviews

3.4

64% would recommend to a friend

(980 total reviews)
avatar

Aurelien Mottier

84% approve of CEO

55% positive business outlook

MemoryBlue has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 980 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The MemoryBlue employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

980 reviews
1.0
Jun 24, 2019

Wasn't as great as they say

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice coworkers thats about it.

Cons

looking back at my tenure at Memoryblue I can honestly say I wish I took another job and not accepted the offer. At first I got a decent account and thats key to your success if you can have a good account or client you'll be fine. I liked my client and he was really fun to work with I just didn't like the memoryblue side. First and foremost that training 5,000 contract you sign is ridiculous and unethical compared to your acclaimed "World Class Training" when listening to SDR calls only to have people either not pay attention or make comments cause they didn't like you etc. I always walked out of those just knowing I wasted an hour of my day when I could be making calls or could be doing something else productive. You have to list build for the client which can take a lot of time and sometimes I think you should of been given a full day to list build to have a good client list. But you do something like that and you're not one of there favorites then you might as well get ready to be looked at like you're an idiot. The mangers were OK at best I say that cause some of the managers shouldn't be in the position they would rather out cast they don't like and be buddy buddy with the friends they have. Which is really frustrating when I gave it my all and they didn't give myself or others a fair opportunity. Moral of this all is just think twice before taking this job. If you're experienced in sales you can do better for sure. But for someone like me who was new to it all I regret my time here cause it was only a let down and I felt lied too.

avatar
MemoryBlue Response
6y
Thank you for posting your open and honest feedback. One major area where our opinions diverge is in the assessment of what comprises the sales training universe at memoryBlue. You’ve referenced the weekly all-hands staff training, which is just one of a multitude of avenues we use to train every sales professional within the firm (on an ongoing basis). In particular, our experience in professional sales tells us that the overwhelming majority of early-career sales roles across the country provide very little sales-specific training for new hires. Companies often make the resources-based mistake of trying to get a new sales rep simply “up to speed” on their products and services as fast as possible before turning them loose on their work with little regard to their sales skills. This lets the employee down and delays their growth in sales. We stand behind our proven methodologies and processes, which have produced hundreds of highly accomplished alumni in the high-tech professional sales landscape. We incorporate a strong mix of one-on-one coaching, instructor-led live session work and self-paced multi-media courses and training materials into our process. When you blend these strategies with the other avenues our staff have to improve their sales skills (in-house mentorship programs, regular new hire huddles and small group workshops), we believe we’ve got something an engaged professional can seriously learn from. But they key is (and always will be) that the individual receiving the training is active, engaged and a “student of the game” so to speak. Education fails to stick when the student has an expectation that they are there to show up, pay marginal attention, be entertained (preferably), all the while trainers conduct the heavy lifting on their behalf. Our training methods happen in conjunction with actual sales work by design. We believe firmly in the value of treating our sales floor and space as a laboratory for learning. We’ll certainly continue to ensure there is no ambiguity between our approach to sales training and what our hires expect/receive. It’s something we’re proud of and a constant point of development for our company.
1.0
Aug 29, 2018

Good Training, bad management

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

new training program where it's more in detail, great co workers, young, decent fresh out of college job

Cons

Bad ethics. Will fire you without a probation.

avatar
MemoryBlue Response
7y
Thanks for taking the time to post your feedback in this anonymous forum. As you should be aware, memoryBlue policy is not, nor has it ever been, to let someone go for performance reasons without extended warning, a fair performance improvement period and significant work from management to aid in the avoidance of this outcome. Please feel free to contact either company owner directly if you have additional questions about this policy. Thank you.
1.0
Jun 9, 2016

Run in the other direction

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-young employee culture -nothing else I can think of -if you're lucky enough to be a "favorite" you'll get hired out quickly

Cons

-extremely micromanaged (down to the minutes) -no trust -held back from opportunities of being hired out -immature work culture (drinking and drugs in the office) -discrepancy in pay -dishonest management -no accountability in management -big promises and no follow through -harassment from managers and other employees -there is no value placed on their employees If I had any advice for anyone considering this company: Look elsewhere. They don't provide the training that they promise (you sit in front of a computer for a week and listen to tapes) and you have no freedom. The "bonus structure" is completely rigged and subjective. The managers harass you, and there is no one to turn to when it happens. The 5k they say is a training recoup fee is basically to buy back your freedom. There are so many other opportunities available if sales is what you want to get into, don't get trapped in memoryBlue's lies.

avatar
MemoryBlue Response
10y
The “Cons” listed in the review above are, at best, baseless and, at worst, patently false. Unfortunately, we understand tech sales is an extremely tough and demanding job that is not suited for every person. To succeed, it takes hard work, dedication and talent. Despite 14 years of designing and implementing comprehensive training programs, employing committed management, and establishing a growing Alumni roster of hundreds of former team members that we actively helped land their great next sales jobs, some individuals still do not quite make it in sales. It’s unfortunate that 1 or 2 of them choose the path above when this is the case. And while we’re proud of the overwhelming amount of positive Glassdoor reviews of memoryBlue, there are a few more tepid responses that have offered us constructive feedback that we will always welcome in the spirit of ongoing improvement. The above review is NOT one of those responses, it’s simply a baseless and gratuitous shot at our company. There is little to no merit in any of the statements found there.
Viewing 37 - 39 of 980 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,014 MemoryBlue reviews submitted anonymously by MemoryBlue employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if MemoryBlue is right for you.