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
Aug 3, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people in the CS org are amazing. Really good people who you will love working with. Benefits are good too. The intention of Glassdoor is also good. What we do as a job as a CSM is also rewarding and fun. I love helping a client understand they value they are getting from our product. I know the value I bring to the table with my clients every single day. It's too bad that no one outside of CS realizes this value.

Cons

I don't even know where to begin. There is so much that is wrong right now in CS. We have a fairly new VP who has come in and done her best to restructure, to make this team strategic, but there is only so much one person can do when the CEO doesn't see value in the team she was hired to lead. I'm not even sure he sees value in the overall CSM function (because he doesn't understand it), but I think he knows enough to know what we had before wasn't working which is why he hired her, but things have just gotten worse. I had hoped they would get better with an experienced executive in the mix. The perceived lack of value is something that stems from CEO to all other areas of the company, and impacts us because Sales sees us as nothing more than simple robots who should be running jobs campaigns perfectly. The reality is that we have too many clients to run all of the campaigns effectively, especially when things outside of running campaigns keep falling on our plates. They really pile things on the CS team.. it is all designed to take things off Sales's plate, but the crazy thing is that Account Managers continue to do the CSM job and don't to what it is they need to do, which is dig into accounts and expand relationships and dollars. Sales leadership sees us as little more than glorified admins - thus sales treats us as such, and we feel demoralized and totally undervalued. Our AM counterparts push the admin stuff of the job onto us, but won't let go of the strategic stuff that we're now supposed to be doing. They aren't hitting their quotas (as you can see in all of these other reviews) but if the Account Managers would stop doing CSM work and focus on selling and expanding their existing client base, they might actually do that. But Sales Leadership doesn't trust the CSM team to be strategic and handle the day to day for the accounts, and the sales reps certainly don't. The best example I can give is the Sales Alerts that go out. These are the most demeaning thing to me and the rest of the CSM team. We are barely mentioned other than to indicate who the CSM on the account is .. and it's not always that we deserve a mention, but even when we did something, it's barely recognized when the manager sends it out. Even worse, when others reply all to this email, it's always "great job Account Manager", never, "good job TEAM", or anything to mention that the AM couldn't have done it with out the CSM. Something that is supposed to be a celebration of success - OUR success as a team - ends up demoralizing and showing me that I am not valued over and over and over again. It's insulting and I don't even look at the alerts anymore because I don't want to feel like that anymore. Because of this lack of perceived value, we are all underpaid. This is a Glassdoor theme though, as we aren't known for paying top dollar. The equity is supposed to balance that, but no one on the CS team has enough equity to mean anything. Again, we aren't valued. We are supposed to be taking more and more things off of Sale's plate so that they can achieve their sales goals - but we aren't compensated for this. We have quotas, but the amount of money we are paid in comparison to the AM team is borderline insulting. CS at Glassdoor is thought of as a cost center, not as a function that both saves & brings in revenue, and this is felt by our team daily. People in the CS org are leaving left and right, people who have been through all of it and people who have built it. They're gone. Morale is so low right now and I don't like coming to work anymore. I am not alone. What keeps me coming back is the company mission and the people I work with, those that I'm in the trenches with, I want to see it work with them. I want this to turn around at Glassdoor.

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Glassdoor Response
9y
I agree that there are a great group of people that make up the Customer Success function here at Glassdoor. Thanks for taking the time to share your feedback and frustrations.You've spoken. We've heard you. We talked about this together, but I want to reassure you that we are still making changes that will provide more clarity on roles and evaluating tools and processes to ensure your success. Some of this has already being rolled out and some of it is still a work in progress. We're open to the continued feedback.
1.0
May 11, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Glassdoor was some of the best times of my life work wise. I remember when we started in a smaller office and all really became family. I truly never thought I would leave Glassdoor anytime soon, I thought I would have a long career there. The people I worked with will continue to be some of my best friends in Chicago, and I am thankful to Glassdoor for that.

Cons

Glassdoor is built on the principle of transparency. Christian, everyday you asked us to go out and fight against out competitors when we knew it was hard. We AEs/SAEs struggled, but we continued to do it, and continued to do it with comradery. We didn't make a ton of money, some of us did, most of us didn't compared to others at competitors, but we loved working at Glassdoor, and working hard because we believed in the mission. I don't understand what happened. One day everything was fine the next, 300 lay offs. We did that because you kept reassuring us that Glassdoor was going to come out on top, that if we kept working hard enough, we would have endless growth within the company. Christian, you lied to us. You brought on our Chief Economist to tell us that we are going to be able to make it through this, that we were underpaid for years because Glassdoor was preparing for some sort of inevitable downturn. You told us that we were going to be OK, and that we were well positioned for no lay offs. My question to you is, why did Indeed send out an email to its employees reassuring that they would not be laid off? How is it that Glassdoor let go of 300, many top sellers going to presidents club, long tenure, great experience, etc, and Indeed did not lay of any of its GTM teams? Was this the plan all along? Did you not fight to even keep your top sellers to merge into Indeed at the least? You did not protect your people, Christian. I am very grateful that we got the severance that we did, but the false hope you gave me really crushes me. I still can not believe what happened. I feel like I lost my family and community in Chicago in the blink of an eye. Honesty is always appreciated, and lying to us, leading us on, has lead to massive destruction. The culture you spent years building is now gone. I would like to quote something to you, Christian, that I read on LinkedIn: "Laying off hundreds of people - crisis or not-is a massive leadership failure. Slashing jobs to save a company is like saying "we had to throw some people overboard to save the Titanic" and then ushering the captain to the only lifeboat. Your ship is probably sinking anyway because you have huge financial execution mismanagement problems...".. .....or,... was slashing off the SMB team always the plan and this just helped you cover it? Sad!

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Glassdoor Response
6y
Thank you for sharing about your Glassdoor experience. I am so sad that we are in the position where we had to say goodbye to many incredible people, like yourself. This was not your fault. And the disappointment you feel in me is understandable. I hear your feedback that you felt that we did not clearly communicate what was unfolding with our business and that it came across as false hope. Please know this was not my intention, but again, I hear your feedback and will seek to learn from this. So you know, my intention is always to be as transparent as possible, whether good or bad news. When I spoke in the early days of this pandemic, it was just beginning to spread in the US and was still unclear just how it would affect our business. The impact was dramatic and it was sudden. As the situation progressed, I shared with the company at our most recent All Hands that we’d seen significant declines in our business. In the days and weeks that followed, those declines and the impact of COVID-19 continued and put us in the position to make some very difficult decisions. I want to thank you and acknowledge your contributions to Glassdoor, and for your candid feedback. Christian CEO, Glassdoor
4.0
Oct 4, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Love my coworkers. Definitely will be life long friends. Like the relaxed dress code and the freedom. For the most part, you get back what you put in.

Cons

Where do I begin? Glassdoor is turning into something that it's just 'not'. I chose to begin a career at Glassdoor because of the people, atmosphere, perks, career opportunities, and future manager. Now they're bringing in some new faces from companies that have OPPOSING culture to what Glassdoor is all about. Trying to change us. Couldn't be more clear that all of us are just numbers according to some of the new management here. It is not being received well. You have, and will continue, to lose great employees because of it. The vibes are not what they used to be. Nobody feels job security. More than half of the sales reps are exploring new careers as of late. Practice what you preach..... Give your employees a "Job and Company they love" because that is what we originally signed up for.

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Glassdoor Response
8y
Thank you for taking the time to write this all out, and I'm sorry that you are feeling this way. I'm really excited about the culture we have in Chicago, and at Glassdoor as a whole, and I have a deep commitment to continue its tradition as a place everyone feels welcome, valued, and enthusiastic about their job. That said, your concerns are absolutely heard, and I'll take them to heart as we head into the end of this year. I remain confident that we are a mission-driven company with amazing people doing great work, and I'm proud of our folks every day.
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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.