Glassdoor reviews

3.9

66% would recommend to a friend

(1,113 total reviews)
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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
2.0
Feb 22, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing company and great value add to the recruitment industry. We get to help people find jobs they love and it's a great message! CEO is a great guy, really down to earth and passionate about our vision Great people and coworkers. I've made lifelong friends in a short amount of time

Cons

1- New comp plan: I'm being told that I need to sell more, while getting less commission. So I basically have to work harder and get paid the same or less (VERY likely we will make less as the goals are lofty). We are regressing, not progressing. This is drastic even by industry standards The mid-level managers are going to bat for us and trying to make things fair and keep us happy. But we have no insight into these things and it's hard for us to keep believing that the team has their best interest out for us. Is there a way to make us more involved in these conversations so we aren't blindsided? When I'm told as an employee that I don't deserve an increase in pay because of a stellar performance last year and it's going to be harder for me to make the same amount of money. Soul crushing...you just took away all my sales mojo :( 2. Unable to make decisions in a reasonable time: Pricing needs fixing ASAP. I understand we are reviewing but this is urgent and has been going on since last year. There are so many layers of approvals that it's hurting us on the front lines. This also goes for territory shifts and changes. I can't tell you the number of times I've heard "we are doing scoring" What is the scoring? Can we see it? Everything is in a black box and we only hear about it on Friday afternoons (seriously, every comp plan, quota, territory email). There is going to be fallout, don't be afraid to address it 3. Sales Ops: They rule the roost and management has no authority over them whatsoever (seems that way). Aren't the sales team their internal customer? I'm not saying we need world class service, but clear communication, email responses, quotes that work and don't change things without telling us would be nice. Honestly, I'd rather deal with my cable company

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Glassdoor Response
10y
I know it's hard to adjust to new structures. Especially when they keep changing. We are sorting through the plans and our processes and we are taking the feedback to heart. Yes, decisions should be made in reasonable time. Yes, your comp plans should fair and modeled to reward great work! Yes, you should feel informed and yes, we are fixing this all ASAP. I am working with the team to ensure we have the right plans and processes in place.
4.0
Feb 17, 2016

Recrutier

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great team, environment, culture. Company truly walks their talk.

Cons

Lots to do, but making impact.

2.0
Feb 16, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are so many pros to list that I'm afraid this could become an Oscar speech. I want to say that there are a lot of really great motivated people that push to bring out the best part of you everyday. Sales leadership is dedicated and down to earth. Managers especially care about their reps and will seldom pass any blame or take credit away from their reps. Full snack bar. Catered lunches. Beautiful office. Fast growing company. Team outings. Unlimited vacation.

Cons

It really pains me to have to write in this section but something has come up that needs to be addressed. Before a few days ago this section would have been very slim. To be quite frank there aren't a lot of cons. Except one... Glassdoor is a fast growing company and it has growing pains. Often times these pains can be swept aside and easily masked behind a wave of positive attributes. Things are changing. Glassdoor has always been known for underpaying its reps. The carrot that has kept everyone working is vested interest in the company. The company is reaching a point where they are asking too much of their reps without showing good faith in return. Upper management and most likely the board want to squeeze every last possible dollar out of its sales team while paying them significantly less than market value. If you look at a lot of reps they aren't even mad at the recent slash in comp plans. They are defeated! Many live and breathe Glassdoor and are huge contributors to reaching lofty sales org goals. Only to see that hard work used against them in the following years comp and quota plans. Slashing an already underpaid sales team with no warning is not what Glassdoor represents. We are different than other companies in so many ways. Why do we forget transparency when it comes to the most important reason we all work in the first place? The majority of these reps will not make it big when the company decides to go public. We will still be working extremely hard to make this company successful and reach all of its goals. Large changes like this come from the top. Can Glassdoor really afford to loose it's top talent right now?

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Glassdoor Response
10y
This quarter has been an unusual one as we straddle a quarter in between 2016 and a new FY17. We are constantly benchmarking against salary information. Our goal is to build comp plans that are fair and attainable while also modeling for high achievement. Glassdoor is committed to doing right by our people - especially our sales organization, which does such incredible work.
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Glassdoor has 1,268 Glassdoor reviews submitted anonymously by Glassdoor employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Glassdoor is right for you.