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Tableau Software

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Tableau Software reviews

3.8

70% would recommend to a friend

(1,146 total reviews)
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Mark Nelson

70% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Tableau Software has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 1,146 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Tableau Software 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

1K reviews
2.0
Apr 24, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Product remains excellent and is a market leader in its space - Company is well-positioned, both technically and financially, for future growth

Cons

Mutual respect: There have been instances (multiple) where an employee was treated belligerently and nothing was done about it. This indicates that the company is more concerned, at least at the mid-management level, with performance than with people, or our company values. Career growth: There have also been multiple instances where an employee was held back or rejected for a promotion due to teams being short-staffed, while people were hired from outside to fill those roles instead. Of course hiring people from outside is fine, but it seems that the company's priorities are not with personal career growth, but rather the company's growth as a whole. Individuals are also not treated, generally speaking, to clear career development paths. In many instances, they are left guessing what might be a good next step for them, and the onus is on the individual to forge a path for themselves. I do understand that career development is a privilege and not necessarily a right, however I also am aware that many companies take pride and a proactive role in growing employees from within. Compensation: Our general pay is well below market average; raises typically come (for sales) in the form of on-target commission raises, not base pay (meaning there is no risk to the company, and in fact they save money), and bonuses are only granted, at least to the average worker, in the form of contests or stock. Stock offerings have decreased every year, and are roughly 10-20% of what they were 5 years ago. Organizational structure, compensation, and even accounting standards change each year, and as a result, compensation plans and quotas are not typically received until February, sometimes even March. Because of this, employees are working towards goals and pay that they don't even know until well into the year. These things seem like an artifact of being a public company. Anything that has an effect on stock price takes priority. This is an organizational philosophy that is fine, as far as it goes, and if that's what the company chooses to prioritize, then that's their prerogative. However such values often conflict with our stated company values, making these seem like nothing more than empty talk. The impression some are left with is there is only a focus on the bottom line, and everything else is secondary. The company has a right, of course, to focus their effort and attention where they please. But for the purposes of this survey, it does not make it a "best place to work." On the positive side, the product remains excellent, and the company is well-positioned for future growth, both technically and financially. This is not enough, however, to compensate for the lack of care and strategy for their human capital, at least as far as quality of work experience is concerned. Though I once proudly championed the company as an employer, and actively advocated for it among potential recruits, I do so no longer. I understand that as a company grows in headcount it is almost necessarily true that each employee is given less attention and is essentially less important. However many large enterprises have managed to maintain a focus on quality of work experience because it is a cornerstone of their success. It was once so with this company as well, but we have persistently failed to put in place programs and strategies to maintain this focus in parallel, and at the same scale, as our company headcount and revenue growth. If the company wishes to continue to attract and retain top talent, specifically in customer-facing roles, then these methods and priorities need to be addressed and corrected. I also believe that this feedback is likely a waste of my time, because if an organization does not value employee feedback as highly as it ought, then of course the same fate will befall these comments.

1.0
Sep 7, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing product, great benefits, great location

Cons

Austin office managers are the worse. Very immature, bullies, do not understand their job nor the product. All the hard working employees are gone. Disappointment and dissatisfaction is clear and there’s not a singular individual I know that is not currently looking for a new position.

1.0
Feb 15, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good work life balance Great office Free food Great Product

Cons

A deteriorating work environment and atmosphere due a growing frustration from employees regardless of territory and position. Frustration stems from: * Undermarket wages * Lack of communication and transparency * An environment where some get preferential treatment * Regular mistakes on payslips and lack of concerns about it * Highly bureaucratic, with increasingly cumbersome processes, acting as if they are a company with 30k employees They show a complete lack of respect towards their employees, they have a strong sense of entitlement and have no interest in listening to employees’ valid concerns or opinions. Tableau considers employees to be like pawns on a chessboard, using them how they see fit only to fulfil the company or manager’s personal agenda. The employee at no point has a say or is consulted in career changing decisions; employees are simply not taken in consideration. For a company that has “we respect each other” as one of their core values, it is shockingly lacking and should probably change it to “their way or the highway”. Clueless middle management (including directors) have no power and are just there to pass down information and play nice. Good luck on making them fight for you as they are too afraid that it would hurt their careers or cause them difficulties. There is also a complete lack of ownership when it comes to decision-making - decisions are made, teams find out through rumour and there is no official communication to anyone, leaving everyone feeling very unstable. Tableau was once a fun company, full of people with the same mission of working hard selling a great software and playing hard. In fact, the ‘play hard’ aspect is touted by HR as a perk. The reality is that Tableau has become a company that put itself first, organises lacklustre and basic parties that finish at 8pm and where you have to pay for your own drinks.

Viewing 19 - 21 of 1,146 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,249 Tableau Software reviews submitted anonymously by Tableau Software employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Tableau Software is right for you.