Meraki reviews

3.8

68% would recommend to a friend

(681 total reviews)
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Lawrence Huang

73% approve of CEO

59% positive business outlook

Meraki has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 681 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Meraki 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

681 reviews
3.0
Aug 19, 2020

The ship has sailed

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- It may be a cliche, but the people really make the experience here. Most ICs and a handful of Mgrs are wonderful and extremely talented people who are excited to grow as a part of the Meraki community. - Stocked kitchens and great views of the bay (warning the catered lunch is really hit or miss, some days fabulous, other's inedible - mind you this is part of your comp package not just complaining). - There is a lot of internal opportunity at the IC and team lead level (but many of these moves are lateral in level and pay so be wary for long term growth) - both a pro and a con - some folks bring dogs daily which can be really fun or really disruptive depending on the dog/owner. - I've seen a lot more women getting into middle management and higher, it's no where near balanced but it is a distinct improvement over time - You get a pretty decent benefits package, employee stock purchase, 401k match, and beyond thanks in large part to Cisco - Having Cisco on your resume already looks great, but having Meraki specifically can really open doors

Cons

- With anything that scales the quality unfortunately changes, the beautiful office feels extremely crowded and beat up (lot's of chipped furniture, scratched walls, cabinets with broken doors) folks are less warm and more entitled treating the space and the facilities staff like a hotel and maids instead of participating as a community. This can be seen by the trash and dirty dishes left in meeting rooms, plates full of food left in sinks, trash bins overflowing onto the floors in high traffic bathrooms -What used to feel like a tight knit community feels much more tribal/clique like with folks only interacting with their own teams even within departments. This also affects cross department communication, folks are almost hesitant to speak to people outside of their teams for fear they will be asked to take on more projects or have to help someone with a process or system. The open floor plan makes it really hard to focus with drive by requests and chatty teammates. - Morale is pretty low across the board according to our internal yearly survey, folks don't feel recognized with growth or pay. The benefits may have made up for the below market rates, but so many other companies have blown us out of the water with in house catering, clean facilities, community events, a health benefit or gym larger than a small hotel gym. When these topics come up in company wide AMAs the answers from leadership are very vague and hand wavey. - Also the negative to the dogs - speaking with the ladies that clean the office they very often pick up dog poop off the Sales floor as there are tons of poorly behaved dogs who's owners are too busy working to watch them. There's also a decent amount of scared dogs who growl if you go near the desk or if another dog walks by, which is tough considering how many people and dogs are in office at any given time. - The work life balance here really depends on your role and your manager. Most of my experience was on teams that had an unspoken culture of working through half or all of lunch and working late both in office and at home. I often had teammates from other time zones pinging me between 10pm-6am looking for immediate responses (mostly forgetting time zones I think). - Management and career development are probably two of my biggest cons here, the managers until recently were usually young inexperienced ICs who were really good at their IC job and then were promoted to manage 8-12 ICs including weekly 1:1s. I'd say most of my 1:1s and reviews were missed without reschedule or months late. I rarely had time in my roles to work on career growth, and compound that with the lack of a career ladder or metrics to help you argue for a raise or grade change. I honestly felt most of my managers over the years cared, but either didn't know how to advocate for the team or didn't have the power to affect the changes we needed to feel supported and appreciated. - Legacy Merakians (the big names who have been around pre Cisco Acquisition) are usually positive in that they have tribal knowledge and brand history, but more often than not their ideas and tactics are outdated and they are given a lot of freedom and power simply due to their tenure and not necessarily in alignment with their output. To put it bluntly there are a lot of old timers that are stuck in their ways causing an extreme tech and process debt unlike anywhere else I have worked. There have been so many times when looking at a tool or process that a teammate or I asked "Why do we do it this way?" and literally no one knows as the people who put the system in place are gone or moved to different departments. We had accounts being billed to Merakians who had not worked at the company for years. Because of this, there are many pieces that are known to be inefficient or costly but we did not have the bandwidth to overhaul anything either because it would require starting from scratch or because the very tightly staffed teams could not spare the cycles.

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Meraki Response
5y
Thank you for sharing your experiences, both positive and negative. We agree that our people are one of the best things about working at Cisco Meraki. We're also glad you recognize the progress we've made getting women into leadership roles. Cisco Meraki continues to actively work on creating the most inclusive culture for our employees, and that starts at the top. Regarding the rest of your feedback, we are sorry about the negative experiences you describe. We strive to create a workplace environment that encourages community and collaboration between all of our employees, including our facilities staff. Disrespect or mistreatment of our people or our workplace is not tolerated, period. We do recognize and understand that there is an adjustment period for remote employees and the hours in which they work, and that there has been an increase in working hours across the globe in recent months. Work-life balance is an important part of our culture, and we encourage employees to have these conversations with their leadership via weekly Team Space check-ins or one-on-one meetings. Employee growth is something we take very seriously. We're grateful to have access to amazing educators and resources available through Cisco, and we are continuously working to make our Meraki development programs even more robust. When it comes to compensation, we always consider the role, the level of experience required, and location when determining salary ranges. We strive to be fair, targeted, and market competitive. We want you to know we will be sharing this with the appropriate leaders, who take feedback and transparency very seriously. Thank you for sharing your experience - we wish you the best in your next role.
1.0
Mar 12, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1) ZERO-There are no pros

Cons

1) Call Center - 8 hours of work is on the Phone i.e. literally all the time you will be on the phone+ along with Juggling Supporting Email Cases+ Creating Bug reports+Reproducing issues+ Meeting SLA's-Your time is tracked by Managers from all teams in minutes via Call system, New Voice Media. 2) You work in shifts, let's say you are working 8-5 shift, YOU have to be signed in at 8 sharp and be ready to take calls, they track your time like hawks, you get 15 mins 2 breaks in a day! you are timed the whole day, you can't even breathe through your day! In any given day you take 15-20 calls approx. + 7-10 emails cases. You are working at 200% brain power+high intensity. They call it SUPPORT BURN and it is real! 3) You are not allowed to take more than two breaks in a day, mind you that should include your bathroom breaks. 4) You are not allowed to be a part of any in-office events including Meraki Town-halls, Development training, +Gym BootCamps+Yoga classes+None. As a support engineer, you are treated like cattle. 5) They pay you very low compensation and no concept of salary hike after the performance review as of today. That is still work in progress in that front from 2012. 6) You will be reporting to unqualified support managers & senior managers, most of them don't even have college degrees and no leadership experience. 7) Most of the OPT's, H1B's please don't get trapped because you have no way out- you are stuck for immigration stuff and will gain no new skills to help you switch jobs you will only have BURN SUPPORT BURN! 8) This job will stress you out, leave you exhausted at the end of the day, on the everyday basis-Its simply not worth it! 9) I have personally have asked my colleagues "what do you do after work hours?"- The get a universal response of- We are Exhausted, stressed and we just want to crash and nothing else! 10) Please find a better place and don't regret later. 11) No flexible work from home policy- Need prior approvals and preset criteria have to be met. No work from home on sick days! and others.

2.0
Jul 1, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great OTEs and a fair comp plan (Ranges from 90K-140K based on exp for the same role) - Free restaurant meals catered (Not at all healthy though so be careful!!!) - Amazing people working in individual contributor roles across the board (NOT management, BEWARE)

Cons

- Cisco Corporate has taken over with force since the beginning of economic pressures & COVID - Perks are being rolled back (New employees are no longer sent to San Francisco for 2 weeks of training, Vegas for the Sales Org Kick-off is gone and probably not coming back, etc) - Rampant favoritism in territory segmentation - Favoritism and favors pull people into management - Lots of virtue signalling (i.e. supporting all major social movements on Twitter only but not actually taking any efforts to increase diversity in management - Management protects management; young managers run the Sales Org and are notorious for passive aggressive people management tactics - Upper management puts TONS of pressure on said younger managers despite being out of touch with individual contributors; the environment is NOT conducive to making these existing managers form meaningful and strong relationships with their teams - Infighting/Office drama that comes along with any major corporation is rampant here. Ask any individual contributor who gets picked on the most and most people in the office will probably say the same 2-3 people. Managers are known to bully individuals on their team that they don't get along with instead of resolving issues like adults (this is why you don't hire children as managers FYI) - Despite great pay in theory there are only a few patches actually able to meet quota during the current crisis; expect maybe 70-75% of your OTE during the current crisis - While everyone is given the opportunity to climb the organization in theory, often times favorites who everyone assumed was next in line end up getting promotions 9 times out of 10. If you're not a favorite or a POC with aspirations of something better, expect some empty promises

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Meraki Response
5y
Thank you for your feedback. We understand that this is a frustrating time for many people, as we continue to navigate a global pandemic. Our priority has always been and will continue to be, the well-being of our employees. As we adjust to operating remotely, we are working hard to ensure the safety of every Merakian and to help all of our teams have a good experience. We are disappointed to hear about your experience with management. Behavior that creates a hostile or intimidating work environment is a violation of our company policy, and will not be tolerated under any circumstances. We will be bringing your concerns to our leadership team, and we encourage you to submit a report with the ethics team (these can be made anonymously if you’d prefer). Thank you for taking the time to share your experiences. Employee feedback helps us to constantly be working toward improving the workplace experience for all of Merakians.
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Glassdoor has 785 Meraki reviews submitted anonymously by Meraki employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Meraki is right for you.