Glassdoor reviews

3.9

66% would recommend to a friend

(1,113 total reviews)
avatar

Owen Humphries

84% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

Glassdoor has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 1,113 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Glassdoor employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informationstechnologie industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
3.0
Jan 20, 2017

The highest highs and the lowest lows

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Glassdoor made a lasting impact on my career, and set the bar really high for anywhere else I go now. The pros of working at Glassdoor start with the people who make up the company. I made some of my best friends here and became a part of the big family. Sounds cliche but we were bonded under a strong vision and belief in bettering peoples lives through transparency. Robert was and still is an amazingly inspirational leader. It's hard to find that type of leader and it's certainly not at any old start up out here in the Bay. I feel lucky to have followed Robert for close to three years during our high growth phase. Autonomy and a value on work-life balance. We really walked the walk at GD with regards to letting people work how they wanted to just as long as they were getting their job done. I valued the unlimited PTO policy when we still had it. A brand and belief that is fundamentally changing the way companies treat and engage with their employees. It's really cool to feel a part of something bigger, and in my own small way as an SDR and then an AE I got to contribute to helping spread our mission and change the HR landscape. This isn't something you come across at every company. And it's a big deal and a reason GD enjoys such loyal employees who "bleed green" and run through brick walls for their company.

Cons

I've struggled with writing this review for 6 months now. I wanted my feedback to be balanced and when I left I had felt a lot of anger that has now subsided. I've been through quite a bit during my almost 3 yrs with Glassdoor and have seen the company change from a crazy fast growth start up to a bigger, more corporate machine. Some cons that eventually added up to me departing (and it wasn't an easy choice): 1) Not being set up for success in sales. I had a particularly rough go of it with a particularly bad territory but managed to hold on until we flattened it (that helped a lot and all the reps who had territories outside of the Bay Area or NYC started hitting quota). I want to make clear that flattening the territories isn't something every company does and I have a ton of admiration for Robert and our sales leadership at the time for their ownership and accountability in fixing the problem. Unfortunately more problems persisted along side and afterwards. 2) Constant moving targets. Some of this is to be expected as we are in a fast growth company who in a lot of ways is "still figuring it out." The target as of now is hitting an AE2 quota for 1 year before you can become an AE2. Then, you aren't given any actually better accounts or tools to hit your higher quota. What resulted was a bunch of burnt out AEs who get to AE2 and then falter. The AEs who were able to only sit as an AE2 for one quarter were able to mitigate this effect (commonly referred to by all AEs) known as the "AE2 curse." Might be due to point #3. 3) Crazy rampant politics amongst middle management. Unfortunately there's a couple offenders who treat some of their reps worse than others simply because they didn't suck up to them as much as they would like. We haven't been operating as a meritocracy like we claim to be. It's created a very toxic culture and bred resentment amongst the reps who weren't "favorites." 4) Managers are ineffective. This was the final straw for me. I stayed through everything listed above because I had a manager that genuinely cared about my success and happiness. Once I was placed under a new manager it wore down my self-esteem, self-worth, and made my one-on-ones a constant chess match of who could "win" the argument. I no longer had anyone in my corner, in fact, after constant threats and snarky remarks it felt like I had an enemy.

avatar
Glassdoor Response
9y
I'm really glad to hear this place made such a lasting impact on your career. Sounds like you made great friends and learned a lot along the way. As cliche as it sounds, I'm reminded time and time again that our people are truly what makes GD so special. As a fast growing company, it's true that we've lived through moving sales targets and we've made decisions with good intentions that just didn't work for one reason or another. We're continuing to invest in manager training too. I expect we'll make more progress this year as we are keenly aware that managers are integral to the employee experience at GD. Thanks again for choosing to come to our company and as always, if you want to give me feedback directly please reach out. - Kate
1.0
Jan 18, 2017

The Red Wedding

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some of the brightest and most lovable people I've ever come across. The typical technology company perks. Great mission that used to be easy to get behind, however, as of late, it feels phony being that what is preached is clearly not being practiced.

Cons

Sales is a legitimate nightmare. Glassdoor's own "Know Your Worth" tool confirmed that we were grossly underpaid (awkward). People have been promoted into leadership that do not possess the soft skills necessary to empathize with or motivate those that report to them. Things are such a mess on the Customer Success / Account Management side that New Business Account Executives are hesitant to sell the dream being that claw backs have become quite frequent. In addition, the politics are endless. Reps who are doing better than their peers are put on plans due to how their Director or Manager feel about them personally rather than how they are performing.

avatar
Glassdoor Response
9y
I appreciate your perspective. I want you to know that sales is deeply, deeply respected at Glassdoor and we try to support our sales teams in every way that we possibly can. That said, we certainly have our growing pains and are investing in our management eduction and training. I'm sorry Glassdoor sales didn't work out for you, and I truly wish you the best in whatever your next chapter is.
3.0
Jan 17, 2017

Good company

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are many pros: catered lunch, gym (small one though), waterfront views, free parking

Cons

Salaries are much less than the average for the area, no 401k matching, mid-level managers are inexperienced, very little equity is offered to the key contributors

Viewing 808 - 810 of 1,113 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,269 Glassdoor reviews submitted anonymously by Glassdoor employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Glassdoor is right for you.