Great Company - Anonymous employee Flexential Employee Review

4.0
Jun 28, 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Sales Compensation plan is good. Great people.

Cons

I didn't put alot of pro's because, well, most people want to hear the cons. In this case, the Con's aren't lengthy. First off, when you have high performers working in the same office as new reps, you've really got to spread the wealth. I get that those high performers have earned their keep so to speak, but if they retire or leave, you really haven't shored up a bench to fill the gaps. If you join any office of ViaWest, expect to be given the crappiest accounts and be expected to grow that. Well, my thought is if you're willing to give them up, they aren't growing and god forbid they're probably near chrun status. Focus on new business development. That's your only way of selling. Acquisition integration and process: This is probably the biggest downfall I experience here. There are too many legacy cloud services and then add in the acquisiton of INETu and now them being acquired by Peak 10 they have problems here because Sales people don't know what to sell, how to sell it and whether or not its valid. They've done a poor job of managing legacy cloud systems, technology decisions were short sighted which shows lack of focus and expertise in this area. Sometimes REALLY smart technical guys don't make good executives and it shows here. The processes are generally OK, but the proliferation of spreadsheets and word documents is huge. There were some poor choices on internal systems that basically "Nuked" them back to 2005. Im surprised nobody got fired for that...but thats neither here nor there. The product team is essentially one person in Allentown. Not to diminish any one person, but she's entirely overworked and its evident. There should be at least 2-3 people. The good news is integrating with Peak10 will probably fix this problem. Amazon: Reselling amazon is just a mistake. Plain and simple. Sales leadership: There's no nice way to put this, but sales leadership is hollow and self serving. I'm not going to drag someone through the mud, but if you expect your Regional leaders to roll up their sleeves you better do the same. Be engaging and genuine. Also, focus your time on developing sales people rather than just spending your time with the one's who you know are going to upsell their customers. On that note, figure out a business development plan. You can't pat yourself on the back with 80-90% of your quarterly numbers coming from the base. That spigot will dry up if you don't get the new logo acquisition machine going. Lastly, I think mandating that people cant take vacation is illegal.

Explore other reviews about Flexential

5.0
Mar 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Excellent exposure to large-scale data center infrastructure, automation, and hybrid IT environments, making this a great place to build or deepen technical expertise. Leadership continues to invest in modernization, standardization, and process improvement, showing a long-term commitment to growth and operational excellence.

Cons

Work can be fast-paced and demanding during major projects or incidents, which comes with the territory of critical infrastructure. Some processes are still evolving as systems and regions continue to be aligned — though this is clearly improving over time.

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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