Softchoice reviews

3.9

78% would recommend to a friend

(1,288 total reviews)
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Andrew Caprara

85% approve of CEO

69% positive business outlook

Softchoice has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 1,288 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Softchoice 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

1K reviews
2.0
Jan 10, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

When you're young and have low expectations, the Beer Fridays and Take your Dog to Work seem like a great thing. If you have little desire to be more then an amateur salesperson, this is a great place to work.

Cons

Upper management is a joke. Their philosophy is to pour a few beers down their employees throats and assume they'll overlook the fact that their comp plan sucks and their reps are a bunch of Koolaide drinking dorks who love to scream "I bleed Orange" at Launch in Toronto"! It's unbelievable!!!! Obviously these kids out of college buy into it before they mature enough to realize they've been used by this Canadian way of doing business. US stockholders would never put up with this type of BS.

1.0
May 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote work, interacting with Googlers

Cons

My experience within the Google category at Softchoice was unfortunately one of the most disappointing experiences of my career in tech sales. The biggest issue was the gap between what was promised during the interview process and the reality of the role once onboarding began. During recruiting, outbound AEs were told we would have dedicated BDR partnership and strong pre-sales support to help progress and close opportunities. In reality, neither materialized in practice. For nearly a year, the outbound AE team operated without the BDR support that had been discussed during hiring. Once leadership realized the new outbound Google motion was struggling and no AEs had successfully closed business yet, the entire team was placed on PIPs. Only after that did leadership introduce offshore BDR support across completely different time zones, which created even more communication and alignment issues. Pre-sales support was another major disappointment. Demos frequently felt underprepared and disconnected, and instead of feeling like a unified revenue organization, it often felt like pre-sales, partnerships, leadership, and AEs were all operating independently with little real strategy or collaboration behind the scenes. The culture itself felt highly political, cliquish, and condescending toward frontline sales teams. I’ve worked in aggressive, performance-driven environments before and have no issue with accountability or pressure, but there’s a major difference between a high-performance culture and an organization that lacks operational alignment, enablement, and leadership accountability. What also stood out was the constant internal negativity toward Google itself, which was surprising considering this was supposed to be a Google-focused organization. Leadership frequently made comments that came across as resentful toward Google Direct teams and younger Googlers, which created a strange environment for people who joined motivated to build strong relationships within the Google ecosystem. The overall leadership style within the Google category felt outdated and unpolished for a modern cloud organization. Rather than feeling inspired, coached, or developed, many interactions felt dismissive, reactive, and morale-draining. What made the experience especially frustrating was that this was still a relatively new Google practice with a brand-new outbound motion. Instead of acknowledging organizational growing pains and adjusting strategy, leadership ultimately placed the AE team on PIPs and later terminated the entire outbound AE organization on the same day. I learned from the experience, but overall it felt like a very disorganized and poorly led cloud sales organization. I would not recommend the Google category at Softchoice to sellers looking for strong mentorship, operational maturity, strategic leadership, or a collaborative modern tech culture.

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Softchoice Response
3w
Thank you for taking the time to share your detailed feedback. We’re sorry to hear your experience was disappointing and appreciate you being open about what didn't work for you. We understand how challenging it can be when expectations don’t align with day‑to‑day realities, and we take concerns about leadership alignment, enablement, and culture seriously. Creating an environment where our people feel aligned, motivated, and equipped to succeed—both with customers and partners—is critical to who we strive to be. Feedback like this is important as we continue to grow our business. We appreciate your contributions during your time with us and wish you success in what’s next.
1.0
Jan 30, 2024

DEI discrimination

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Cushy job, if you like culture it's great

Cons

They fired all the men on the team and replaced them with only women

Viewing 64 - 66 of 1,288 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,360 Softchoice reviews submitted anonymously by Softchoice employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Softchoice is right for you.