Volusion reviews

3.1

47% would recommend to a friend

(315 total reviews)
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Troy Pike

50% approve of CEO

36% positive business outlook

Volusion has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 315 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Volusion 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

315 reviews
1.0
Jan 14, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Unlimited PTO (For non-customer support or sales roles) - use it while you can • Very flexible/WFH (For non-customer support or sales roles) • Good snacks, Cold Brew on Tap, Free Energy Drinks, Good and somewhat frequent catering • The recruiting team and interview process are excellent at selling the hollow vision and culture of the company.

Cons

Red Flags: • Extremely-high turnover rate - This is particularly true for some positions. Positions that have left (on their own) in the past year include: 6 VPs/Directors, half the product team, some of the marketing team, half of sales management, half of finance, the entirety of Business Development, a fair amount of sales reps, several engineers, several project managers, and more. I can’t name specific titles (according to Glassdoor guidelines,) but know that these were many positions (about 30-40 people out of <200) across the entire company. Some people didn’t even make it a year! • Layoffs - Volusion lays people off EVERY YEAR, without fail. The new CEO believes in "freeing up" 10% of staff budgets every year, to make room for new hires. Sounds to me like he's got a budgeting problem. They just laid off the remainder of the product team, as well as several marketing, IT, sales, and client services. Last year they laid off about 30% of marketing, 30% of client services, 20% of engineering, and several each of Sales/Support reps. This leads to…. • Capacity/Workload Imbalances - Oftentimes, when someone leaves, is fired/laid off, etc. instead of backfilling the position, the responsibilities of that role get absorbed by teammates. One of the main reasons Volusion doesn’t backfill is because they can’t: when someone more senior/experienced leaves who has many responsibilities, Volusion can’t afford a new hire with the same qualifications. Not only does this cause capacity issues, but other employees are now overworking, while still earning the same pay. Eventually the overworked and now overqualified and underpaid employee will easily get the same job somewhere else for more appropriate pay and title. The real capacity issues, though, come from Volusion’s engineering department. These engineers are fantastic, so it’s a real shame they don’t have the support they need. The full time team headcount floats around <10% of the company, which for a company of ~200 (it’s hard to keep track of with all the layoffs), is not a lot. So, while the executive team creates loftier goals every year, and competitors continue to lap Volusion 100x over in terms of features/functionality/partnerships/integrations, Volusion relies on this very talented yet small group of engineers to keep the engine sputtering. Volusion does buy them donuts sometimes, so that makes up for it, right? Volusion boasts the term “work smarter not harder,” but in most cases at Volusion, small input does not equal expected large output (it’s a hard operations problem, I know.) Because of this... • Volusion hasn't released a full feature in over a year - Now, it depends how you define a “full feature,” but here, I’ll define it as “stable 90% of the time, available for all qualifying customers, can be used now on the platform/app catalog, and hasn’t been replaced by a new, similar feature with less functionality.” If you go by that definition…then yeah, nothing new has been released. Some MVP apps/features were released temporarily, only to have been taken off the platform because of stability issues, bugs, poor relationships with contract developers/vendors, or “it just plain ole don’t work.” Last year, Volusion increased prices on most of their licenses, sometimes doubling or more the monthly fee customers pay (so they can inflate their “growth” numbers.) To offset this, they promised customers a specific new feature, but unfortunately, do to capacity, shifting goals, and all-around general shadiness, that promise was not kept. • Poor Quality, Expensive, non-functioning Contractor Work - Volusion tends to outsource important features, apps, etc. to get them done quickly, and are shocked when they don’t turn out so well. In the past year, 3-4 different large apps/features/relationships have been shut down for various reasons including inability of Volusion to communicate, provide complete requirements, or meet contractual agreements (including paying the contractors). This leads to the issue above and... • Nepotism - Speaking of poor quality, expensive, or non-functioning contractor work, the employee handbook states “Volusion will not hire any close relative to any legal, finance, or HR position,” so it’s quite surprising that they still do. It also states that “relatives of anyone in a management position will not be hired into any position, even if reporting to another manager.” Contradiction is a common theme at Volusion when it comes to policies and the culture code. It seems the only way to get a contract gig (or a newly made C-Suite position) is to personally know the founder or CEO. • Founder Over-involvement - Speaking of, the founder emulates Elon Musk, but fails to execute. He says things like “Tesla sells cars without actually having cars” only, bro, Volusion isn’t selling Teslas. He started the company over 20 years ago, and has consistently gotten in the way. He was CEO, then he wasn’t, then he was again, and now he’s not again. He doesn’t even have a job title anymore except “Founder,” which means he gets to poke his nose into anything you’re doing at any given time, blow it up, and leave you to pick up the pieces so he can move onto the next project or person to bully. He mansplains a lot, and likes to put words in your mouth. You leave conversations by agreeing with him, except you don’t really know what you just agreed to. He likes to send Wikipedia articles or links to dictionary websites to explain phrases that are quite common. He went to a few management training classes, and he says some of the things you’re “supposed to say” as a manager, but his actions speak louder than words. And the fact that he has been removed from people management positions several times should scream. He is a walking contradiction of the company culture code that he wrote - specifically because he picks and chooses phrases to use against you, or your decisions. Ultimately, the final decision-making power comes down to him and the CEO, and if you have the “wrong answers” you will have to change them quickly, or prepare for the next round of layoffs.You have to wonder why so many people, especially upper management, have left recently. It’s hard to work for people who don’t respect your experience or role that THEY hired you for. • Lack of/unrealistic/shifting strategy & vision, impossible to execute - It’s hard to go into much detail here, since the overall vision/strategy/goals/”Mountains”(as they are now being called, which is just another word for...goals…) change every 3-6 months. This means that what Volusion builds, how they market, and how they sell changes at the same rate. Even if you meet your goals, you might not be safe from the layoffs. • Micromanagement and manipulation from Executives - you can basically copy and paste what was said about the Founder here, but also apply it to the CEO and some of the executive team, or whatever is left of it. • 3-4 Customers run the company - from a feature development perspective. So much money/work/effort is put into keeping these customers (most of which pay very little or nothing at all) on the Volusion platform(s). Most of the work spent making these customers happy is not scalable or repeatable (cc: Capacity & haven’t put out new features), so while Volusion saves the crown jewels, they spend even more money/effort begging or tricking other customers from leaving. If it were easier to switch platforms, most of the customers would have left by now. And since Volusion can’t seem to put parity features out fast enough, it’s only a matter of time.

1.0
Jan 13, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good eye for great, genuine people, Amazing benefits for insurance and PTO, nice office with lots of perks

Cons

Failing product, and revolving product staff. Several layoffs in waves of 10-30 people at a time. Constant fear of being the next one they get rid of. The product team (at the direction of CEO, Bardia Dejban) focuses on what they call "competitive features" rather than what the clients need at the product's core. They pay no attention to feedback from sales or account management when it comes to improving the product. They often sell incomplete and fragmented products before they're ready to be used, which only makes clients mad that they spent their money on it... thus they end up canceling. Look up info on "Mozu" to see an example of this. They're also guilty of hiring new people at a higher pay, only to be trained and on-boarded by another tenured employee that makes less than the trainee. After being let go with several others, I realized how much more I was worth and how much I deserved better as soon as I started interviewing.

1.0
Jan 10, 2020

Don't get fooled

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work/life balance is really great. Nobody knows when or if you come into the office because the leaders are totally clueless about what is going on and what it takes to build a good product. The HR team provides a lot of perks to try to keep you happy since the actual work is tedious and it is likely that your team is being mismanaged. There is free snacks, drinks, lots of games, events, health/wellness perks, etc.

Cons

•Leadership. All levels but particularly at the top. The main decision makers are completely out of touch with what it takes to compete in a market against real competition. They have no idea how to develop a modern software product that people will want to use. •Micromanaged environment. This has been mentioned in other reviews, but it is really astounding how much the top leadership will micromanage you, your team, and anything you are working on while being able to provide you with ZERO direction or decisions. •Constant chaos abounds. The whole place is bursting into flames on a regular basis, and leadership is never prepared or have any kind of plan. They careen from on disaster to the next, disasters of their own making, and the only consistent thing is that they will double down on those terrible decisions and talk about them at the monthly all hands as though those decisions were great things. •Founder is still heavily involved. 20 years ago he built a successful product, but the landscape has drastically changed. It is quite clear that he has no idea what he is doing any longer. He also has no defined role, so he dabbles in whatever catches his attention for the moment which amounts to him completely derailing work and destroying morale of the people he interacts with. The environment at Volusion coddles him though and allows this to happen. •Vision. Non-existent. They do come up with what they call a vision, but they have zero buy in from lower level employees on that vision because everyone knows it is complete nonsense. It will also constantly changed, sometimes in small ways, usually in huge ways. •Yearly layoffs. Just because they have open positions listed doesn't mean they won't lay people off that do the same job. Layoffs are a sign that a company is being mismanaged, and they do them every year at Volusion. They'll even hire people and lay them off a couple of months later, so it's clear that they are not thinking very far ahead even though they plan to do layoffs every year. •Financial stability. The layoffs are always sold as a labor shift. Let some people go that their skills don't match the needs so they can hire the right people. Oddly though, they never hire the people they claim they want, or they hire very few compared to the amount of people laid off. Also there is a fairly constant stream of people leaving and their positions don't get backfilled, huge holes are just left on teams. These are just some of the red flags that show the company is mismanaged and probably not financially sound. •Career advancement. This doesn't exist. Your team is only going to shrink sooner or later, it won't grow. Your chances to move up are very unlikely. •General sketchiness. People will get hired to lead teams there when no position was ever posted, nobody on the team to be managed ever met or interviewed the person, and no advanced warning given. When this happens you can be sure that the person being hired will be 2 things, a yes man that is going to agree with the 2 decision makers, and they are in some way a friend. Overall, 6 months ago I would've said hey this is not a great place, but if you just are interested in collecting a paycheck and don't mind to be micromanaged go for it. At this point though I can't even go that far as I'm not confident the company will be around in a year, I'd actually be quite surprised. It seems like they are expertly running it into the ground at an astonishing pace. Also just be aware that if you do interview with them, they talk a very good game in interviews and all say all the right things to make it sound appealing to work there. There is a massive disconnect between what they say and what they actually do though once you're on the job. And a last note, just look around and put the pieces together. Look at reviews of volusion, particularly the comments section where customers can post. Rarely will you see anyone give the product a favorable review or score. Glassdoor reviews are generally bad. You can also should a little google searching of some of the news that gets reported about Volusion (outside of their own press releases). These should paint a pretty clear picture for you.

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Glassdoor has 325 Volusion reviews submitted anonymously by Volusion employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Volusion is right for you.