ZoomInfo reviews

3.8

74% would recommend to a friend

(2,183 total reviews)
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Henry Schuck

79% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

ZoomInfo has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 2,183 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ZoomInfo 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

2K reviews
1.0
Aug 8, 2023

CEO mocks employees

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good product. User experience etc very good.

Cons

Where to start... this place is a mess. If you were a recruiter, you could message the staff with any opportunity and get a 90 percent response rate. Everyone wants out. Culture is abysmal, and it will literally ruin your life. Last week with CEO meeting after brutal earnings, CEO got on and blamed everyone in the company for the miss, especially the AMs, and insulted everyone and mocked them and said if they didn't fully return to office they'll get fired, and every "bad company " they go to instead will run out of cash in 6 months ( which is funny because that's where majority of his market is, and where wall street ripped him for struggling to get renewals from). Also there's daily commit meetings, multiple times/day where the leadership is harassing you endlessly on every singles thing you're doing, looking at blocks on your calendar, and forcing you to remove them. If you want to see how bad micromanagement can get, this is the place to join. Also some of the newly joined directors are the worst sales people on the planet. Laughably bad. The learning opportunity as a result is negligible. Shame on you Zoominfo. This used to be a great place to work.

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ZoomInfo Response
2y
We appreciate the time you took to leave a review about your experience at ZI. And as you heard Henry mention during the All Hands meeting, there are great benefits to reap when you are present in the office! You might not even realize how much you’re learning from listening to how your manager deals with a conflict or hearing how a more seasoned seller pitches a new customer. You might also pick up on useful details on a project or spot a chance to share input while you’re filling your water bottle, or microwaving your lunch. The message was not mocking in nature, rather it was to help explain that our hybrid model was designed to build relationships, drive collaboration and maintain culture. It was a true passion for our culture to see us all thrive together! And to clarify our training, we offer targeted learning programs for our managers to continue to grow their skills in giving feedback and coaching. For example, our Management Accelerator program focuses on the essential management skills that all people leaders at ZoomInfo are expected to master. And our Manager Success Labs enable our managers to practice their skills through role plays and guided exercises, to enable them to tackle real-world managerial challenges. If you have additional feedback you like to share to help us improve, please reach out to your HRBP. Thank you!
1.0
Oct 2, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

OT Hours are paid, great product, well known company

Cons

Everything else. This is a very boiler room like "work over everything" company. I will find myself constantly working until 7/8 PM to stay in pace with my peers, who are also working those hours. Management regularly has said we can make calls while making dinner or during night hours. If you have any life outside of work at all be prepared to throw it away once you start here. Hustle culture is embedded into your brain from the second you start, and anyone who wants to work normal hours will be ridiculed and way behind. The quotas are unrealistic, and nobody seems to talk about it. 10% of my team hit quota last month (I was part of this 10%, so not a disgruntled employee) and the management will just throw wolf of wall street quotes at you and say you "gotta want it"...99% of this job is out of your control plain and simple. We need to stop pretending like the completes you get every month aren't purely luck based on the leads you're given, which by the way there are favorites who get handed leads because management is buddy buddy with them. Meetings every day with no value, we all have access to a dashboard we don't need daily recaps. The sad part is this company has the potential to be great but they rely on stressed sales people with no life outside of work to sell their product because that's the culture they built.

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ZoomInfo Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to leave your review and feedback, it is truly valued. As you know, our SDR team is critical to the sales cycle and we appreciate everything you do to make us successful. As for the mass hiring class every month, we are still growing so those openings are driven primarily by new positions and openings due to promotions. We believe in promoting from within and nobody is promoted more than our SDRs. As you're aware, we are going through a reorg in our sales department, which is very exciting. Thank you again for your feedback.
1.0
Feb 8, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A lot of the AMs are truly awesome people, coworkers and friends.

Cons

Where do I start? I wouldn’t recommend working at ZoomInfo to my worst enemy. If you search for the word “toxic” in Glassdoor review, you’ll get over 55 results, and even that fails to capture the reality of working here. The culture is beyond dysfunctional, and direct leadership for AMs is completely out of their depth. Instead of focusing on meaningful strategy or employee success, their energy is spent justifying their own jobs with endless busy work and arbitrary tasks, none of which move the needle. Meanwhile, Account Managers are burnt out, overworked, and operating on fumes. Every single day is a relentless cycle of company-mandated meetings that achieve nothing. ZoomInfo is obsessed with looking busy rather than actually being productive. Your week might look something like this: a daily team meeting that covers the same topics we’ve been discussing for years, an afternoon stand-down, and one to two one-on-ones with your manager per week. The micromanagement is truly next level. Our forecasts are reported in multiple places, including Salesforce, spreadsheets, and Clari, forcing reps to duplicate work unnecessarily. The irony is that all of this information is already available in these platforms, yet leadership insists we repeat the process anyway. It’s clear that AM directors and VPs don’t trust their own teams to function independently, and their solution is to impose layers upon layers of redundant oversight. Leadership’s approach to sales strategy is detached from reality. Upsells are very hard to come by because most customers are actively trying to scale back. Yet, instead of acknowledging this, leadership rewards superficial wins. Reps who force through small deals that annualize into inflated numbers are praised over those securing real, billable revenue. If you want to know how much this company values busy work over strategy, just look at the asinine daily dial requirement. Every AM is expected to make 20 dials a day despite only managing 60-80 accounts. The math simply doesn’t work. Customers are already bombarded with outreach from AMs, SDRs, CSMs, and marketing. The result is the complete destruction of customer relationships and further damage to ZoomInfo’s already shaky reputation. The company operates on a “what have you done for me in the last hour?” philosophy. Close a deal? Great. Now, what’s in the pipeline for tomorrow? Leadership thrives on throwing arbitrary, last-minute goals at reps and then punishing them when those goals inevitably go unmet. About 80% of this role is based purely on luck. Your book of business determines your success, not skill or effort. That’s why President’s Club has an almost entirely different roster of winners every year. And just when you think leadership’s expectations couldn’t be more absurd, they celebrate reps closing deals while on honeymoons or parental leave. Nothing screams “we respect work-life balance” quite like applauding someone for closing a deal while they should be spending time with their newborn or spouse. Simply put, there is no work-life balance here. Leadership tracks everything, including how many customer meetings we have per day. If you take vacation, a honeymoon, or even an overseas trip, you’re expected to make up every single meeting once you return. If you don’t, there are consequences. Unplugging is nearly impossible. Managers will contact you while you’re out, and this isn’t an exception, it’s the norm. The surveillance culture at ZoomInfo is something out of a dystopian novel. Leadership micromanages every possible metric, and if you start to slip, they come down on you fast and hard. The irony is that they fail to recognize that their own policies are the reason employee morale is in free fall. High-performing reps are routinely promoted into leadership without any regard for actual leadership skills, leading to a managerial team that lacks both empathy and strategic ability. Most AM managers are disliked because their primary contribution is telling reps to “push harder” or slacking them “only at 5 emails so far today?” without offering any real support or guidance. Middle management is untouchable. Their failures and missteps always fall on the reps. Instead of addressing their own shortcomings, leadership leans heavily on PIPs as a management tool not to help employees improve, but to instill fear and force compliance. Most top performers have either been on a PIP or will be on one eventually. And if leadership really wants to fire someone, they skip the PIP entirely and just do it. Years of stellar performance mean nothing. The moment you slip, you’re disposable. Upper-level leadership is completely out of touch. When employees pushed back against return-to-office policies, the CEO’s response was essentially, “If you don’t like it, go work somewhere else.” He expressed that that we could “go find some rinky-dink company that allows remote work.” While they preach in-person collaboration, they haven’t held a major in-person event in over six years because the CEO considers them (and even President’s Club) a waste of money. Instead, they focus on micromanaging employees from their ivory tower, oblivious to the company’s plummeting stock price and worsening employee morale. During company-wide “ask me anything” meetings, the CEO openly rolls his eyes at employee concerns and questions, making it abundantly clear that he doesn’t care. ZoomInfo talks a big game about benefits, but in reality, they’re nothing special. Health insurance is managed by a third-party administrator. Parental leave is abysmal, only 12 weeks for primary caregivers at base pay only with no commission and a pathetic four weeks for secondary caregivers. Top tech companies offer at least 16 weeks for both parents and pay commission, but ZoomInfo’s policy actively disadvantages women in sales roles. Once again, this company proves it doesn’t care to invest in its employees. They pay well below industry standard, and raises are hard to come by. The stiff current employees and pay outside hires way more. ZoomInfo thinks way too highly of itself while simultaneously being one of the most toxic workplaces imaginable. If you’ve seen one-star Glassdoor reviews or angry LinkedIn rants from customers, believe them, they’re 100 percent accurate. The sales leadership actually believes yelling “LET’S GOOOOOO!!!!” is a legitimate motivational strategy. If you need one final example of how detached leadership is, they openly mocked their biggest competitor for shutting down the last week of December to allow employees to spend time with family. That tells you everything you need to know. I wouldn’t recommend ZoomInfo to anyone, not even if you were desperate.

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Glassdoor has 2,231 ZoomInfo reviews submitted anonymously by ZoomInfo employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if ZoomInfo is right for you.