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
5.0
Jan 6, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This review is after my first month at GD. - Great people - Smart coworkers - Great learning experience - I have got to do meaningful contribution in my first week itself.

Cons

- Commute is long. But its not so much of a problem for me. - Still need to improve some aspects of continuous integration and delivery. But the plans are in place.

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Glassdoor Response
10y
Definitely agree we need to continue to make progress on our continuous integration solution. Hopefully even in the time since you joined you have seen significant progress. But we will keep pushing.
5.0
Oct 30, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

We're living the start-up dream. We're a small, nimble company that has the potential to make a big impact on people's lives. First, I truly believe in the mission of the company - "help people make informed decisions about where they work." Work is important - it's where many people spend the most time, your salary has a big impact on the freedom you have in your life, etc. So helping people make good decisions about their work is important and valuable. Second, the work environment is great. People respect each other. Each person truly contributes to making the company successful. Management (which I'm part of) is extremely open about how decisions are made and what our goals are. And there is a great energy that comes from everyone working together to achieve a shared vision. We respect the importance of having balance in your life. We work hard, but people can always take time off when they want/need to. Often times people work extra but it's because they are excited to deliver results rather than because it's required. And, people are compensated fairly. We have good salaries, extremely generous equity package and great benefits...especially for a startup - what startup do you know that had a 401K in the first year it existed?

Cons

We're prone to many of the drawbacks of a startup. Career opportunity is limited - with a 11 person company, there isn't a lot of room for promotion and taking on more senior roles. However, that is balanced with the opportunity for every person to have total ownership of his/her work and to play many roles so it's a great place to learn and grow. There's also risk in a startup. We're fortunate to have enough capital to build the business, but any startup is riskier than an established company.

2.0
Aug 19, 2024

Alarming Direction

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I've truly loved working at Glassdoor, and most of my coworkers are incredible people.

Cons

I've been holding off leaving this review because difficult periods happen, but the lack of course correction made me want to share in an attempt to get this in front of leadership, and I've been encouraged to do so by my peers. The sales org has been trending in a really concerning direction. Obviously any company values growth, and aggressive expansion is the name of the game right now for Glassdoor. This isn't inherently negative, but the org seems woefully unprepared and inexperienced in how to make that happen. Glassdoor has been incredibly successful for a long time, which seems to have caused the majority of the reps, managers, and directors to be more in the mode of order taker, much more reactive than proactive. This time of year is historically slower, but now that targets are much higher, there is little to no guidance, resource-sharing, or strategizing from the top down. The only thing that anyone has seen is a continuous "do more" in regards to digging up new business and generating an unrealistic amount of leads, which seems to be a poorly veiled way for the directors to soften the blow and their own accountability for the inevitable rough landing this quarter will bring. In a heavy renewal and account management role with many different things on our plate, the team was struggling to consistently bring in 2 fresh leads a week, so the response was to triple that number up to 6-7 rather than investigate why that's the case. Let's not kid ourselves: prospecting and building relationships takes time, and many of the conversations we're having now will likely start to benefit us next quarter. Knowing our aggressive expansion plans (which are relayed in every single town hall, meeting, or casual dinner), and that this time of year is difficult, why was this not a priority last quarter? The sentiment that I've heard from multiple managers is that the reps are coddled and not doing enough, which is a really unprofessional way to say the quiet part out loud. These same folks have carried you for years far past your targets, the least you could do is meet them with the grace they deserve, and lift them up and inspire them to do better. It's also no secret that folks are being paid less for overachieving, goalposts are continually moved further away with quota, and account transitions were the worst I've seen in a long time. The very worst part about all of this is the fact that Glassdoor professes to be an expert on transparency, retention, and employee experience, and yet I have heard no genuine acknowledgement of the challenges or struggle that's going on, just a desperate pushiness to do more. One of our managers shared that we're moving towards tracking meetings, emails, and activity, WHICH IS THE TYPE OF BEHAIVOR THAT GLASSDOOR WAS FOUNDED TO HIGHLIGHT AND WARN JOBSEEKERS ABOUT. Our quota changes from monthly contract value to quarterly contract value is also seeming to cause friction, and now we're being told that we need to prioritize the old model as it's what important to the business, even though we're no longer measured that way. Taking away our contribution from running (previously sold deals that are still benefiting the org) can really only be seen as a way to ensure our success doesn't last too long, and that we'll need to push even harder every single quarter. You can't have it both ways where you take away our $ from previous deals, but also make us sell in a way that isn't consistent with our quota. Without a culture to pride itself on, Glassdoor will just become a vehicle to generate $ for our parent company. There are plenty of places that do that, but there's only one Glassdoor.

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Glassdoor Response
1y
Hello Sales teammate! I can hear the passion in your written words and want to thank you for leaving an honest review. I'm so happy to hear that you love working here and I relate to your sentiment about the incredible people that make up Glassdoor. I hear you loud and clear about the concerns you have. We have been going through a lot of transformative change in a post pandemic world and you are right, it hasn't always been easy. However, I can sincerely tell you that myself and your other Sr. Sales Leaders value your feedback and input. Transparency will always be a core value to us here at Glassdoor and I want to make sure you have the information you need. If you feel comfortable, please reach out to me directly and I would be happy to chat more! You are correct - there is only one Glassdoor. I hope together, we can make it the biggest and best it can be so we can continue to positively impact Employers and Employees around the world. Thanks again for the review and I hope to talk to you soon! - Melinda Wyman, Sales Director
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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.