SAP reviews

4.2

85% would recommend to a friend

(24,984 total reviews)
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Christian Klein

76% approve of CEO

73% positive business outlook

SAP has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 24,984 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The SAP employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informationstechnologie industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

25K reviews
1.0
Jan 31, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

>> Supportive direct management and great co-workers >> Free LaCroix, soda and juice >> Incentives/Competitions; although the extra monthly competitions use to include AMEX gift cards and more appealing prizes now you maybe earn a coffee or free lunch. >> Great benefits through SAP, 25 days of PTO, although in this department it's looked down upon if you utilize your available PTO and because you're quota based you feel too much pressure to enjoy your time off.

Cons

*** FACT: The Market Development department has had over 100% turnover in 2017. I think that number speaks for itself. *** >> Excluding direct management, the directors within Market Development run their department with a "Hero to Zero" mentality if you are not the top performer that month you aren't even worth making eye contact with (when they even make an appearance on the floor which is maybe once every other week to once a month). Directors run their meetings like camp counselors, playing loud music, cheering while you walk into the meetings until they drop bombs on the MDRs discussing new processes that make your job more difficult and rolling out unattainable goals to make it impossible to hit your quota. At first, this "Camp Counselor" leadership style and over the top unauthentic speech is appealing you eventually realize they are constantly speaking to you like children and have no true respect for you as a career professional. Don't ever believe you have a chance to move into a leadership role within the Market Development department. Directors lead MDRs on; whom are more than overqualified, been with the company for multiple years and proven themselves worthy of leadership roles; to think that they have a chance at the roles opening up within the MDR department and then hire externally or in different departments because again, they have no respect for MDRs as career professionals, with one exception, a 23year old that they gave a manager position too because one of the directors had a personal relationship with that MDR. ** Note: Management just handed that MDR the management position without considering any other prospects or making it available to any applicants** - - It's also been discussed that employees applying for internal roles outside of the department have been sabotaged by directors approaching the hiring department telling them not to hire that MDR because they are a top performer and want them to sit in the department and make them more money till they're burned out and leave - - :: Also, there's a "rule" that you have to sit in seat in the Market Development department for at least 1 year before being eligible to move throughout the company. No this is not in your job contract or discussed throughout the interview process you find this out after you're hired and are stuck. :: >> Now to discuss the job itself... You are a telemarketer that can be replaced and rotated out. There is no strategy, you do not create relationships with your Sales Execs because you have 25-40 that you support. You used to strategically work with 4 Sales Execs and support their specific territories going after top accounts and helping them bring in quality customers. They changed this process because of the massive turnover they're seeing in the department and now the sales pipeline won't skip a beat with MDRs constantly leaving. You have call center metrics you have to meet every day and if you don't meet them you are interrogated on the reasons why you didn't meet them that day. The micromanaging is absolutely out of control, there's no faith in you that you are a professional that can do your job and run your business properly. This job requires no relationship building just endlessly calling prospects to see if they have 10min to learn about Concur and passing off anyone who says yes to the Sales Exec assigned too the account then getting back on the phones to find another prospect to say yes. ::: Warning: DO NOT TAKE A SMALL BUSINESS POSITION although the direct manager seems great and doing what he can to make the most of that segment, the goals are wildly unattainable compared to the Inbound, MidMarket and National segments. With the consistent failure, the directors put pressure on this segment and constantly question the failure to meet quota when the quotas are near impossible to hit. ::: >> Unfortunately, because of the way that the directors have built this department and treat their employees you see valuable workers losing belief and confidence in themselves and their abilities. It also is quite obvious that this has spread to other departments so moving internally throughout Concur is becoming more an more difficult. It's heartbreaking to see these quality and overqualified employees being so discouraged and leaving this company after buying into the "Concur dream" because there truly is value in this company, just not in the Market Development department. There are people that have taken massive pay cuts and steps down in their career to buy into this dream and leave lost, beaten down and regretful they ever left their previous job to become part of this department.

2.0
Apr 2, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Free Dinner - Decent benefits (although most companies offer the same or better) - Good people, with some great talent - Opportunity/Requirement of Travel - Flexi-time available (depending on assigned work) To be honest, this is a good place to start your working life (graduate), perfect for an intern. SAP is a big name after all. It's easy at the beginning, and you'll gain good experience desirable in any job - soft skills as well as technical. You can see this reading the 5 star reviews of anyone that has worked here in Dublin for 'less than a year'. It's important that there is an exit plan though, because you WILL be ground down eventually, becoming a transparent shell of the person that you used to be, sitting in an office at 11pm on a Friday night, reminiscing with a sad smile on good times with people you used to know.

Cons

I can only speak of the COE in Dublin, I do not want to paint every department in every country with the same brush. This in mind, here it goes. - Base salary is woeful. We are cheap labour, but 'flexible'. So hire where it's cheap, and send you off to do the same job elsewhere, for a fraction of the cost... In fairness, well spotted. - Yearly increases may allow you to treat yourself to a slightly more expensive take-away (at 11.45pm, on a Friday night, on your own in the house (if you can afford a house)). - Enough has been said about work-life balance, and steps are being actively taken to make it worse. The phrase 'Things can only get better' has been proven wrong on so many occasions, I simply expect the worst. - Last minute travel requests, to places that do not appear on any 'Top 10,000 places to visit before you die' lists, on any website. - Blatant lies, impossible promises. - Unqualified and out of touch Middle Management... It's a mess. You are a number, on an Excel sheet, that someone will look at and say, 'Which number will we put in this place next week?... Actually, who cares?' This is no longer about ability (I assume it may have been once, many Springs ago...) - 'More Graduates... We need more graduates!!' You'd need a plane to get over that knowledge gap... - No training... 'Learn on the job'... Nonsense, it's embarrassing and unprofessional... - The travel. You will see many lovely offices. Big offices, small offices, offices on the 13th floor, offices in the basement.

1.0
Mar 1, 2024

Incompentent, Behind-Times Executives

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lower-level, direct management has been amazing my 5+ years here.

Cons

Benefits are made worse and worse every year. DEI is ONLY done in name, not in reality. No budget is ever given to the topic. Everything is a bureaucratic nightmare of processes layered on processes. Executives are worthless. A year or two after something is trending, they will latch onto it, and push it like nobody's heard of it before.

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