Leadership lacks commitment and perks are gone - Decline to Answer Flexential Employee Review

1.0
Jul 4, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

What perks we had have been taken away.

Cons

Leadership with no commitment to their teams. The only time people get promoted is in Q3 and its less than 1% on average. Constant fear of being let go with 0 reasoning. All hands meetings that tell us nothing. Watching my manager get constantly ran over by things they cannot control. Sales and operations do not work together on solutions. Sales leadership constantly going around our processes and selling deals that are not sustainable.

Explore other reviews about Flexential

5.0
Jul 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing culture, strong leadership, great customer base.

Cons

not many, amazing company, Lots of change

3.0
Mar 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexibility with work life balance Really talented and fun coworkers. Direct upper management great with helping pursue your goals and gathering everyone together to make your job feel like you are in fact a part of a team. This made work enjoyable even when aggravated by other things.

Cons

Compensation and recognition don't match performance. Despite consistent 5-star reviews and going above-and-beyond (taking on extra projects beyond my pay grade), raises were minimal (e.g., 0.9% after a strong first year) and promotions were seemingly gifted on favoritism over performance. Higher leadership (SVPs/L1s) showed limited follow-through on innovative internal projects—e.g., we built data solutions that outperformed enterprise third-party solutions, but they were shelved with only vague "good job" responses and no real investment. L1 attempted to enforce a new corporate policy of flexwork on people living nearly 75 miles away from the nearest corporate satellite office to show. My employment contract did not state I needed to be hybrid yet they enforced it on me even when I didn't have a car and my nearest team member was 3 states over. Policy was dropped after 6 or so months. As a PE-owned company, resources seem heavily directed toward infrastructure expansion (new data centers) rather than employee rewards or reinvestment in existing systems. This leads to frustration when teams outperform but see little financial upside. DCIM and data infrastructure feel under-resourced—limited data engineers, poor visibility into key datasets, infrequent health checks, and surveillance gaps create risks for outages and long-term reliability.

4
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