Sage reviews

3.6

63% would recommend to a friend

(5,266 total reviews)
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Steve Hare

70% approve of CEO

61% positive business outlook

Sage has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 5,266 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Sage employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
5.0
Aug 4, 2015

High engery, happy place to work

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you're committed, self-motivated, enthusiastic and a team player you will see many opportunities at Brightpearl open up to you. Ideas are always welcomed by the execs, whether that's strategic or a company social night...just find the right person to talk to...possibly at the social night. There is a real sense of family at Brightpearl, and all newbies are welcomed with open arms. Everyone is super supportive of each other. With such a happy, energetic, enthusiastic and committed work force, I can honestly say I've never worked at a better company.

Cons

If you're looking for a 9 'til 5 job you won't find it at Brightpearl. It's not that you are forced to work extreme hours but with many people happily working late, or working from home in the evenings and weekends, and then socialising together after work too, you may find that you also become orange on the inside.

5.0
Jul 31, 2015

Softare Developer

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great company and benefits. At the time was I was working there, the company was growing.

Cons

None that I can think of at the moment

2.0
Jul 28, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits (but getting worse every year), good number of vacation hours, casual work environment, and for the most part, hardworking lower-level employees who care about the customers. If you're looking for something to pay the bills and don't care about corporate culture, it will do.

Cons

Upper management, both at Sage Payment Solutions and with Sage as a whole, is absent and gives no clear direction about where Sage is going. New ideas are pushed and then abandoned for the next big thing after countless resources are wasted over many months. Employees are expected to use broken software systems that necessitate many manual processes and that get in the way of what they were hired to do, creating countless inefficiencies. The systems that are used are laughable for a tech company, and the temporary manual processes that are created as workarounds end up being used for years. The new CEO of Payments, who is no improvement from former or interim management in being detached and seeming cluelessness to the inner workings of the division, has proclaimed more than once that "spending is wasting" (which may be a new Sage motto as well). Maybe true, and definitely true if he's referring to the excessive upper management team that seems to serve no real purpose, but still a disheartening thing to hear as a people manager of a team of good workers who already feel underpaid, under appreciated, and unheard. Salaries for employees in front-end risk/loss prevention are around $40-$45K (hardly anything in the DC-metro area), which is disturbing when you consider that these same people are making high-consequence financial decisions on the company's behalf. HR is a joke. They side with management on all matters, and it's becoming increasingly more difficult to hire new people at SPS. In my department, it took nearly 4 months to backfill one low-level position while Sage execs and HR bumbled around deciding whether or not the backfill was necessary (this is after the former employee was terminated with HR's full support, and after HR assured us that backfilling wouldn’t be an issue). Then, when HR finally gave the green light for the recruiter to make a verbal offer to a potential candidate, the offer ended up being rescinded a few days later because of new hiring policies that were rolled out. In my 4 years as hiring manager, I hired 9 people, and maybe 1 of them went off without an HR/recruiter induced hitch or delay. And that pretty much sums up the lack of communication, lack of transparency with leadership, and lack of support from HR or management that seems to have become the norm. In the past 3 years, employee morale has continued to decline to the point now where very few people seem to care about Sage as a brand and instead are just clinging to their jobs, keeping their heads down, and wondering how long they're going to survive before Sage changes direction once again and decides their roles are no longer needed.

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