Culture of mediocrity - Anonymous employee Sage Employee Review

2.0
Sep 22, 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Salary was ok but not competitive in all cases, the health insurance and retirement benefits were excellent. There are some passionate individuals that work there. Their current CEO (Stephen Kelly) is extremely dedicated genuinely wants the organization to succeed.

Cons

I’ve work for Sage and within organizations that rely on their software so I have a unique perspective from inside and outside of the organization. I find it concerning that management below director levels has not seen any real turnover for at least a decade (the number of managers that have been in their position or a similar position for 15+ years is astounding). Management is not interested in upsetting the turnip cart. They pay lip service to “customer service” and “improving customer experience” but other than some hand waving no action ever really takes place. Complacency is the operating model for low and middle management. These same managers have seen their superiors come and go with startling frequency which exacerbates their behavior and apathy. They know they just need to ride out the current director, VP, or C-level until that person is shuffled somewhere else, laid-off, or leaves to seek greener pastures. When that happens, the new body rolls out a new initiative and abandons the prior one - nothing is ever really given a chance to see its full effect - department and/or “all-hands” meetings are called to espouse the benefits of this new vision (met with eye rolls, heavy sighs, and ever sinking morale) . Strictly looking at the support department; staff attrition rates for some software lines leave customers relying on personnel that have little to no training or practical experience in the applications they’re assigned to support. Frequently customers are more knowledgeable about application capabilities than the person they’re asking for help from. When a promising support analyst steps up and takes initiative and additional responsibilities, their spirit gets crushed under the burden of a team that doesn’t reciprocate but instead delegates more, and more, and more until that person is putting in nights and weekends in an effort to keep up with the load; 20% of the staff do 80% of the work. When management is (begrudgingly) pulled into a support issue that hasn’t been satisfactorily resolved the response is underwhelming. If it doesn’t devolve into semantics and petty bickering over specific wording and how the customer is out of line for having an expectation in mind based on what they’ve been told by the support staff, then blame is placed on R&D or the application is “working as designed”. To add insult to injury, the customer is given the option to visit a website to submit an enhancement request - the last FU that can be given when Support cannot be positioned to be effective. Recent initiatives (cost cutting and consolidation) have seen the company shift their personnel from the West Coast to Atlanta, GA. In many cases replacing dedicated, experienced, and well trained personnel with apathetic bodies that lack the dedication and competence of their predecessors. Efforts have to be duplicated because the necessary attention wasn't paid to begin with - this results in a frustrating experience for customers and partners as more time needs to be spent explaining the errors then following up repeatedly until it is done right. All in all, Sage is struggling under the weight of complacency and lack of an actionable vision that is given time to take effect. Software maintenance revenue is the lifeblood of this organization and their MO is to buy up and attempt to maintain applications that will keep that gravy train running. Once that happens though, there is no true innovation that occurs.

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Sage Response
8y
Thanks for your feedback. We benchmark our salaries against other tech companies and in the geography in order to remain competitive. Our benefits are also very good and we receive a lot of positive feedback on them as well as awards. Our performance management process identifies colleagues who are under performing and performance improvement plans are put in place to help get these colleagues back on track. If colleagues (including leaders) performance continues to be unacceptable they may be exited from the organisation – and this is happening. The Talent Review process identifies risks / future gaps in leadership and plan succession pipelines for these positions. This is something we are taking incredibly seriously and we have made commitments to our board to strengthen our leadership pipeline. Sage is not complacent - our mistake is that we may have been in the past, but our new culture of high performing teams demonstrates this is no longer the case. The future is exciting and if you want a challenge and want to be rewarded - Sage is the place for you. Thanks again.

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Pros

was hired as remote and get to have that honored, but have been openly told no career progression because of remote status. decent pay

Cons

Leadership instability: Seven manager changes during my relatively short tenure. Unrealistic targets: A sales quota set at 1,100% growth (not a typo). Slow product development: Getting anything actioned on the product side takes far too long. Product management turnover: Three product manager changes, resulting in no meaningful deliverables in over three years. Misaligned hiring priorities: Greater emphasis on DEI optics than on hiring people positioned to drive growth. Internal vs. customer focus: More energy spent on internal events than on product enhancements. Lack of accountability (the biggest issue): No one takes ownership. Responsibility gets passed around constantly — for example, client cancellations going unprocessed because they impact someone's numbers. Managers have openly encouraged pushing the work onto someone else rather than handling it.

1
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Sage Response
1w
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. We’re sorry to hear about the challenges you’ve described around leadership continuity, targets, growth, and ways of working. We recognise the impact that stability, clear accountability, and achievable goals can have on the day-to-day experience of our colleagues, particularly within sales and customer-facing roles. We shall share your feedback with leaders for their visibility as we continue to evolve how we support our teams to truly thrive at work. If you have any additional insights to share, please leave us more feedback via our internal Always Listening forum or through your manager. Thank you again for sharing your perspective.
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