OpenText Senior Software Developer reviews

3.3

58% would recommend to a friend

(276 total reviews)
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Ayman Antoun

Not enough data to show CEO approval

47% positive business outlook

Senior Software Developer employees have rated OpenText with 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 276 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Senior Software Developer professionals have a good working experience there. OpenText is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Senior Software Developer professionals compared to other employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

276 reviews
1.0
Apr 30, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* Work/life balance * Good people at the lower levels, doing the actual work

Cons

Our company got acquired by OpenText. * On day 1, Mark Barrenechea (CEO) announced the return to office policy of three days a week. - Mark and the execs have very little wiggle room in this policy. - It doesn’t matter how far away from the office you live, or your living situation. You’re expected to be coming in three times a week. (If you can’t do one day in a particular week, there is some leniency for that). - Thankfully, on the ground, managers and site staff understood the practical realities of such a policy. * Mark talked about his immense enthusiasm for what’s called the “OpenVerse” (essentially piggy backing off the Metaverse trend of Meta). - In Mark’s own words it is “about OpenText being reborn in the cloud.” - He’s even written a published book about it, called Versant (look for it on Amazon). Such quotes from the book include: - “Clouds can only reach as high as about 280,000 feet above the surface of the earth. We’re reaching beyond that, into outer space. Into the OpenVerse.” - “We seek gamers. With grit. Who are home in guilds, and embrace growth and goals. Who practice gratitude. The G-Force.” * Mark did an immediate U-turn during the AI hype in the middle of 2023. The OpenVerse was never again mentioned. The pivot was incredibly abrupt. - Suddenly, we were an AI company. Everything was about data, and stuffing AI into as many products as possible. - We even got some "lovely" AI mascots (yes, generated by AI). Google "OpenText ice mascot" and look at the images. * The feeling of many employees was that the company culture was the "Cult of Barrenechea". Everything revolved around Mark. * Approval is needed at literally the highest levels (Mark or C-Suite) for any decision that is even slightly outside of normal processes. * When it comes to UK employment law, OpenText seem to not care. - Those making the big decisions (C-Suite) will act as if US employment law is how things are everywhere. - If people cause trouble, they will default to firing them, unless they get persuaded out of it. * Any HR grievance raised which threatened the status quo was disregarded. - Many of the people in the UK HR teams seemed like good people, but were hamstrung by the rigid approval required from above them. * Despite being a Canadian company, the American corporate culture is overpowering. - There were toxic levels of positivity/enthusiasm shown by C-Suite which were completely detached from those on the ground. * No meaningful pay rises. OpenText gave us small pay rises when buying us out of benefits of our employment contracts. * OpenText want to make software as cheap as possible (ideally in India) and sell as much of it as possible. They really don't care about their employees. * Huge amount of lip service was given for things like environmental policy and diversity. No substance. * All the C-Suite seem like Mark Barrenechea super-fans who have been put in place because they adhere to his word.

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OpenText Response
2y
Thank you for your feedback. All office-based employees have flexible working arrangements in line with our policy. ​Over time, we have seen that while virtual work has undeniable benefits, coming into the office brings about more creativity, innovation and collaboration. ​We remain flexible and there is also a process for colleagues to request becoming remote workers.
2.0
Apr 10, 2024

Avoid if possible

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Isn't great but could be worse

Cons

Slightly below average pay and benefits Most employees do not participate in goal sharing or other incentives Large company run by policies that are inflexible, nonsensical and in some cases hypocritical. For example, a goal of 40% women leadership sounds great but abysmal maternity benefits tells the true story of how much you really care about women.

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OpenText Response
2y
Thank you for your feedback. At OpenText our compensation & benefits policies and programs are reviewed regularly to ensure they align with market rates and local legislation.
4.0
Apr 3, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free food and free transport

Cons

Not much promotions in the recent years

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OpenText Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience, your feedback is highly valuable for us!
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