Veeva Systems reviews

3.5

60% would recommend to a friend

(362 total reviews)
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Peter Gassner

72% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

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362 reviews

Reviews about "Compensation"

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1.0
Jul 13, 2026

Crossix division is extremely toxic

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The only "pro" would be the pay, but the toxic work environment does not make it worth it.

Cons

There are too many to list. The recruitment process was nothing short of strange, including an interview strictly about your personal history and upbringing, which felt very inappropriate and invasive. This should have been my first sign not to start working here. The Crossix leadership team is extremely toxic and it's always an "Us" vs "Them" mentality amongst senior leaders and the rest of the Crossix org. Leadership has declared that they are their team's client, and should be treated as such. There is no mentorship or leadership whatsoever - only micromanaging and insults. Team morale is lower than low -- Constantly overworked, no clear expectations ever provided, and nothing is ever good enough. Internal "projects" take up a huge amount of your day to day bandwidth, when you already have too much client and external work on your plate. Working well after hours and over the weekend is the norm and if you're not doing this, you're viewed as an underachiever. People are not given any feedback regarding low performance - they will fire you on a whim with no warning. Even clients see the toxicity and negative energy that leadership perpetuates, and will let you know it. The culture in three words: Belittling, Toxic, Authoritarian.

1.0
Jun 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote work is offered, but discouraged

Cons

IF YOU'RE APPLYING TO VEEVA IN THE ANALYTICS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM, AVOID AT ALL COSTS! Crossix has a morale problem that leadership either doesn't see or doesn't care to fix. The frustrating part is that everyone has been describing the same issues year after year. Either the feedback never reaches decision-makers or it reaches them and gets ignored. Employees are consistently overworked, undervalued, and expected to absorb an endless stream of responsibilities without meaningful rewards. The work itself is often repetitive and uninspiring, and career mobility feels more like a recruiting slogan than an actual opportunity. If you're ambitious, the fastest way to grow your career is usually to leave. The culture has also become deeply risk-averse because blame is often assigned faster than problems are solved. People learn quickly that protecting themselves is more important than speaking honestly. But the biggest issue is the company's addiction to reorganizations. Teams are constantly being restructured, reporting lines are always changing, priorities get rewritten every few months, and everyone is expected to act like this latest shuffle is the one that will finally solve everything. Instead, each reorg creates more confusion, more uncertainty, and another hit to productivity. Employees have become conditioned not to invest in anything because they assume it will be reorganized away anyway. The result is a workforce that feels exhausted, cynical, and disconnected. I've worked at places where people complained but still enjoyed the work. Here, the overwhelming feeling is resignation. NOBODY is excited to be here. People stay because the paycheck is reliable, the job market is uncertain, or they've been around long enough to become trapped by familiarity (especially Bucknell women). The saddest part is that some people think the work actually matters and the job won't be replaced by AI in a few years.

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