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 Tecnologías de la información industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
Apr 19, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Glassdoor has attracted some genuinely cool people and the idea of working for a "Startup" in a new market sounded appealing.

Cons

Where to start... If you are a seasoned sales pro, this is not the place for you. Many have come and many have gone. Your CV will get you the interview, your performance in the interview will get you the job and then prepare to forget everything that has made you successful and exist in a world of Sandler and scripted sales, asking nothing but a series of questions to the point where you are making the person on the other end of the phone uncomfortable. You hate when it's being done to you and now you're doing it to others, with your manager listening in! You will be assigned a book of 1500 accounts but expect them to be blasted by hundreds of templated emails by the SDR team and burnt. Aggressive American sales tactics are enforced and celebrated at Glassdoor with awards being handed out by the SDR Team Lead. But incredibly high activities have worked in the past for the US market, but we're not in the US market. You cannot conduct this way in Europe and not expect to be burnt. You are not allowed to go after new business?! This was always the biggest mystery at Glassdoor, new business AE's can not go after new business. Non-stop expansion stories in the Irish media, with job announcement all across the country. 400 jobs in Dublin etc, and the company isn't a customer of Glassdoor, what will I do next?? Nothing, back to your book of accounts. With every major US tech company having an EMEA operation in Dublin, you would think that in a new market, this would be the lowest hanging fruit for the Dublin and London office. But no, when the topic is raised with management the response is "you have 1500 accounts you should be focussing on." Glassdoor hasn't figured out how to approach MNC's from beyond the US. The sales strategy is inbound focused - Pump the marketing engine full of cash and measure the outcome - organic traffic to free profiles. SDR receive inbounds and are not expected to qualify the lead. They are expected to uncover a Need before passing it to the AE. Again, another big mystery at Glassdoor, why is the success of the SDR and marketing team being inflated?? It makes no sense, the business is hurting the business. You will be forced to work a worthless pipeline and forced to do the job of an SDR. And then you will be asked in 1:1's "if you asked the correct questions" or "did we get enough pain". AE's are treated like poor behaving volunteers. Selling the product is a cycle of rinse and repeat, the same series of questions, the same presentations, dressed up to uncover an incredible amount of pain and presenting on what is essentially a coat of paint on a shop front. You will hate yourself after the first quarter. EMEA management are like fish out of water. Inexperienced, incredibly political and emotional. In place to enforce Sandler and "learnings", through call breakdowns, 1:1's and team meetings. Weekly meetings sometimes hit 7 hours per week! Madness. Glassdoor love to enforce the methodology, over and over again. Friday afternoons meant it was time for the weekly, throw my colleague under a bus session, with 15 AE's and managers listening to one of your bad calls followed by a round the room critique. How embarrassing for those involved. Your manager will contact you through IM, Whatsapp and email at all hours, weekends and when you're on annual leave asking about your pipeline. There are no boundaries. The fall on the sword moment will be that they just want to make you successful and that's why they're reaching out. No perks to speak of. Typical in the tech industry due to the demands and nature of the business, good companies provide perks to ease stress. Glassdoor in the US provides perks and operate in a world where feedback and concerns are encouraged and acted on - They become better employers by doing this. In Dublin, there is one perk to speak of, a shared Nespresso machine in the shared kitchen of a serviced office. Completely unacceptable for a "Startup" who have been trading in Dublin for 14 months, carrying an EMEA HQ stamp. You will be told that business is creating a true startup environment which is something not everybody gets's to experience, (so count yourselves lucky?!). Obviously a complete cop-out. Apply for a role if you want to start a sales career in the tech industry. It would seem that previous experience isn't required and that the culture fit is what's most important. So if you can conform to the micromanagement and what I've outlined above, you'll do well. What a truly disappointing experience.

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Glassdoor Response
9y
At Glassdoor, our aim is to help people everywhere find jobs and companies they love, and that begins with our own employees. We are in the business of transparency and I’m sorry to see that you did not feel comfortable being this transparent while you were part of this organisation. Where we agree completely is that we have an amazing team in place and they continue to impress and inspire one another everyday. In fact, our top performers are the ones who seek the most coaching & raise their hands to collaborate with marketing and SDRs to come up with solutions to problems. They also embrace collaboration and teamwork, seeing group feedback as an opportunity to learn from one another vs. an opportunity to roast a colleague. I’m sorry to hear our culture wasn’t for you, but I appreciate your comments. They are helpful as we evaluate what works for different teams and locations, and I appreciate that you took the time to share. We wish you luck in your future career.
1.0
Apr 4, 2016

I feel like Glassdoor just broke up with me

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Friendship will be forever at Glassdoor.

Cons

The culture once represented a family, a community, a team that will always have your back.... until now. Our leadership has taken away one thing that made Glassdoor worth fighting for.... Our Unlimited PTO. Yes, we aren't paid as high as the average rate on Glassdoor, yes our quota went up, yes our pay was cut, but I always knew Glassdoor was a safe zone, a place where you could call your second home... until now. Now, I have only 15 days of PTO and I feel like a child who just got grounded by their parents. My work is always done before I leave for the day. I always give my all. However, how can we keep going as an individual/ a team/ a family when management increases our quotas/ cut our pay/ and take away unlimited PTO. My heart is broken and I feel betrayed. I have never said a word about the changes at Glassdoor because my heart bleeds green inside and out. However, it is starting to not bleed that bright green it used to. When I first started, Green was the only color I could think of, but now it is starting to get darker and darker and I am worried one day it will no longer be green.

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Glassdoor Response
10y
Your passion and love for Glassdoor are clear. You're right that our sales team has weathered a lot of change and uncertainty this last quarter and I'm proud and humbled by the commitment I see everyday. Regarding PTO changes: employees who recently moved to non-exempt status now receive 15 days PTO. I also wanted to share that this is in addition to 10 paid holidays and 3 paid volunteer days--a total of 28 paid days off. And, you are now paid for your PTO days whether you take them or not. Plus, we will still be allowing for as much flexibility as we can, including 100% paid health insurance premiums, and sales plans with no caps. We remain committed to helping create a culture that is mission driven and gives you the ability to be amazing at work and at life. We appreciate the feedback, and hope that you'll work with us through these changes and see that their are many aspects of Glassdoor worth fighting for.
1.0
May 25, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Glassdoor is a company that everyone knows and respects for its consumer facing materials. Every recruiter will see Glassdoor on your resume and know what you worked on, making 'GD' a good stepping stone. The PR team is world class. Glassdoor also allows for a good work life balance (given you are exempt status...), and people for sure take advantage of it.

Cons

The culture is shot, the company is no where near being profitable, and the cash burn rate isn't getting better. Theres no fun and inspiring management, no company cohesiveness, and there is absolutely no shared goals. This company has been torn to shreds by sales culture and has a 'work hard burn out and sell sell sell' feel. Everyone is in panic mode trying to prove how valuable and important their work is to the flawed business model. This rushed culture makes everyone produce work that they're not proud of, and it shows. Things are shipped broken, just so management can say "hey we did this, just like I said! Now give me more stock and a raise." If you're a manager that wants to build a team and do awesome things, prepare to get over ruled by "this is the way its alway been done." If you're an engineer looking to make something you're proud of, prepare to spend half a day coding and a week explaining why you coded it that way. Lastly - compensation. Don't expect to get any substantial units from Glassdoor. They're just not there for you to take. Plus, the ones you have wont make you any money (there was even a quarter where strike price went down). Plus half of the company got taken off exempt status, thus striping them of freedoms that are core to Glassdoor's culture.

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Glassdoor Response
10y
I read every review that comes through and respond to many of them as do other leaders. And, every once in a while there is one that leaves me unsure how to respond. This falls into the latter category. It's always disappointing to hear that an employee has a bad experience. I am sorry you left feeling this way and the experiences that contributed to it. While I don't think this is the norm, there are clearly some basic things that we should have done better for you. The reason I struggle a little with how to respond is that a key "Pro" that you cite is great work/life balance, but much of the "Cons" listed describe a frantic pace. I'm not going to be able to solve this here for you. I'm always happy to answer questions 1:1 or with a larger group. That's why we do company meetings every other week. It's important to me to be able to address things head on, dispel rumors right away, and try to understand what's working and what's not. I appreciate you taking time to share your feedback. I wish you luck and, per your comment, truly hope having Glassdoor on your resume will be a good stepping stone to find a job and company you love.
Viewing 25 - 27 of 1,113 Reviews

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.