Sage reviews

3.5

63% would recommend to a friend

(5,257 total reviews)
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Steve Hare

70% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

Sage has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 5,257 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
2.0
Jun 9, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

One Sage lifer said: "We have no leadership. So we play a lot of golf." Easy to sell to under 100 employees organizations, even though executive team will push for up market (up to 200 employees.) There is so much confusion, that leads so much change, that execs have accepted their fate: we will lose deal after deal. So expectations low and dropping.

Cons

Management changed their titles to appear as VPs for prospect calls. No onboarding, no training, so your manager will be clueless. Morale cannot get lower, but it does. Of 12 reps on my team, 1 person has made sales, and the ISR team is devoted to his patch and in 3 years, all total, he is not close to quota for 1 year. Team sales meetings covered critical items such as: how to use email, how to call a prospect and ask for employee count rather than flying on-site, and when to use an SC (most reps had the SCs do most everything.)

2.0
Sep 10, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Sage has been in the business of acquiring competition as a tool to dominate the market for decades. That worked fine when other large companies did the same thing, but the world has moved on and that model is no longer viable. So, it's changing in order to survive and grow. It's achieving that by getting rid of non-core assets globally - buildings and people basically. There's nothing intrinsically wrong with that - there's no way Sage could have carried on the way it was - the competition is leaner, more agile and technologically has Sage on the back foot. It'll get there, I'm sure - but there's still more pain ahead for its workforce. Because Sage is still rapidly re-inventing itself, it's hard to leave a review that is constructive since reviewers experiences will relate to its current period of change and life before that. Did I enjoy it? Yes - hugely - great team spirit and support. My team, colleagues and immediate management were hugely passionate about what we did. Benefits were just about passable for a FTSE 100 company: - Good holiday (25 days running up to 28) - Pension contribution up to 9%. Not the best by a long chalk, but pretty good - Additional health packages available to suit needs - Buy/sell holiday if you need to - Flexible work from home options, for extended periods if you could justify it - 35 hr full time week - Reward gateway for discounts on products/services etc - There was a share save scheme. - Discretionary support for longer serving employees in times of need.

Cons

Salaries are humiliating. The bonus scheme was so small it hardly served as an incentive. (I'm not sure the bonus scheme still exists) The share scheme has been suspended. I doubt it'll return. This is a shame because it made up for poor salaries and was a good tool for employee retention. The appraisal experience was pointless. In principle it's a great idea; aligning employee needs to that of the business etc. In practice it was a bureaucratic waste of time that typically led to an awkward end of year review for both employee and line manager since it didn’t matter how good or bad you were, everyone got the same. Pay rises depended on performance but the increments on offer actively put employees off pursuing anything. Career opportunities are virtually non-existent. There have been cases where employees have used the appraisal process to progress agreeing goals with their line manager, work towards it all year, meet those targets, and then be told they will not be promoted or compensated. The only other theoretical way of advancement is 'in-band' progression. However, since this is all geared toward a sensible pay rise if goals are met, and Sage refuse to reward its staff through market rate compensation, the idea is folly. The new ethos is 'having to over-achieve to 'achieve''. The current restructuring is of course a difficult time for Sage but there won't be too many, if any people who fail to understand the need for that change - even when it affects their own positions. However, the way that change has been delivered is a shambles. Top tier management flown in to execute breed a culture of narcissism and set unachievable targets for the company to follow. It's an indicator that they do not understand or think they do not need to understand the nature of the business in order to bring about a successful restructure. The net result is the process is a lot more painful than it needs to be, and a lot skilled experienced people have left the business.

2.0
Apr 4, 2016

Average wages, no career growth

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

When I first started at Sage it was a very employee focused place to work. Salaries were competitive and schedules were flexible.

Cons

Leadership has changed drastically over the past year or so and big changes came because of it. PTO has been cut and recently, they have laid off about 200 employees. Company culture is almost non-existent and employee morale is extremely low.

Viewing 55 - 57 of 5,257 Reviews

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