How to turn a company around, then lose it in 5 easy steps - an IMM story - Anonymous employee Impact Networking Employee Review

1.0
May 6, 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people working the front lines are the most amazing people. Smart, creative, funny, dazzling people. They are some of the best people you'll ever meet, but it;s too bad they are wasting their time at a company that does not care, diminishes what they do, and is driving them out day by day with clamping down on archaic rules and taking away benefits. To all of those in creative, account and other areas looking for new jobs...there are much better places that don't just pay lip-service to corporate culture and taking care of employees, while doing all they can to make things harder for people.

Cons

First, give lots of lip service to "culture" and how you love your employees then do everything you can to make it harder for them to work. Become even more inflexible about remote work. Now, clamp down on people being at work by 8 am and staying until exactly 5. Start writing people up who arrive late. Also, take away their sick days and stop your 401k match. You're now on our way to losing it all. Second, hire some moron who lives in Canada while telling everyone "the company has no work from home policy." Pretend this hypocrisy does not exist. Whenever it's brought up, fire the person who did so. Also, try not to laugh as the moron from Canada tries to elicit sympathy about having to spend one lousy week a month away from how grown children. Sir, some people pay good money to spend a week in Chicago. Third, hire a Canadian moron who does not know what anyone in his company does, diminishes everything everyone does, has never created anything of substance in his life, talks only in sports and Tom Brady metaphors, and likely has never ready anything beyond the first few sentences of a Sports Illustrated article. Mr. Dyck, you're a child. Go away. Fourth, hire a great team, watch as the company slowly turns around like the opposite of the Titanic trying to avoid the iceberg. Brag at all of the meetings how the Net Promoter Scores are now "world class." Brag at an all company meeting how you've cut down on turnover. Then, instead of doing anything you can to keep that team happy, clamp down and cause EVERYONE to start looking for jobs elsewhere. Fifth, show no appreciation to those who maybe have to travel far in brutal Chicago traffic. Refuse to admit that there is no actual reason to be against hybrid or work from home. Say stupid HR-like things like "Impact has always worked best in a team environment." Try to say the work spaces and offices are built for productivity with a straight face. Pretend you don't notice that some of the most productive people in the company are only so productive when they find quiet isolated places within the building to work. Ignore progress. Stick to the old ways while pretending to be a progressive company. Die on a very, very stupid hill and watch as everyone leaves for other companies...then try to keep those high net promoter scores when there are only 4 people left.

Explore other reviews about Impact Networking

5.0
Jun 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Few environments offer the variety that Impact does. Team members work across managed services, AV, document management, cybersecurity, and cloud platforms simultaneously, making this an exceptional place to build a well-rounded career fast. We get to work with modern tools - those unfamilar in other organizations - enterprise-grade technology stacks is a real career differentiator. Senior leadership is approachable and engaged. Decisions don't disappear into a black hole — there's a culture of being responsive.

Cons

Impact's entrepreneurial energy is one of its greatest strengths, and that same energy means the company frequently pursues exciting new initiatives. For employees, this occasionally means context-switching across many priorities at once.

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Impact Networking Response
5d
Thank you for the level of detail you’ve shared about your experience, particularly around the variety of work and exposure across different technologies. It’s encouraging to see how that breadth of experience and access to modern tools has supported your career development. We're also glad to see responsiveness reflected in your experience as building a culture where communication is timely and visible is important to how we operate. Your perspective on maintaining focus and refining where time and resources are spent is valuable as we continue to evaluate how teams operate and prioritize. Balancing new initiatives with focus and execution continues to be an area we actively evaluate as the organization grows and expands its capabilities. Impact Human Resources Team
1.0
Jun 30, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I worked with genuinely good people and built relationships that I still value and maintain after leaving. The role provided strong early-career exposure and accelerated my development significantly. I learned more here than in any prior role, especially around sales conversations, executive engagement, and business problem-solving.

Cons

Disclaimer This section reflects my personal experience and perspective as a former employee. I did not have had full visibility into all executive, financial, or operational decisions, and my interpretation is most certainly incomplete or wrong in some areas. However, this is an honest account of what I directly experienced, observed, and understood during my time at the company. Compensation trust, payroll reliability, and financial concerns While the compensation structure appears attractive on paper, my experience did not always align with that expectation. I personally observed situations where commission outcomes did not always match the terms or expectations set at the time of closing, including instances where payout structures were adjusted after deals were signed, which created confusion and a lack of trust in consistency. In addition, I personally experienced payroll processing delays / bounced checks during my tenure, which further impacted confidence in compensation reliability. Regardless of cause, this created concern for me as payroll consistency is foundational to employee trust. I also experienced issues related to retirement (401k) contributions being deducted from my pay but not reflected in my account, which required escalation and ultimately led me to needing outside legal council to resolve. For me, this was one of the most serious breakdowns in trust during my time at the company. I also observed broader financial pressure signals during my tenure, including internal discussions around restructuring and liquidity management. I saw vendor payments that appeared significantly delayed, which in some cases seemed to impact ongoing service delivery and support for active client contracts. I also observed publicly visible information and restructuring activity involving company real estate assets you can google, which contributed to concerns about financial stability. There was also leadership turnover during this period, including CFO-level changes, which added to a broader sense of instability. High-pressure culture and employee turnover The sales organization in particular experienced high turnover. In my experience, many employees in SDR and AE roles did not remain long-term, and average tenure in sales roles felt relatively short. Hiring classes were typically 20+ people, and there was a recurring internal joke across teams about how few people remained from each onboarding group after a year. It was commonly joked that only 1–2 people from a class were still around after a year or so, which became a shorthand reference point for how quickly turnover occurred. This environment was paired with a fully in-office, highly structured, and performance-driven culture. Employees were required to wear business professional attire (including suit and tie), which reinforced a very image-forward, high-discipline culture. From my perspective, this created a high-pressure, highly monitored environment that emphasized appearance and intensity, with limited flexibility compared to more modern hybrid workplaces. Sales expectations, OTE reality, and career progression While compensation potential is positioned as a major upside, my experience was that OTE functioned more as a theoretical target than a realistic outcome for most employees. From what I observed across the organization, quota attainment appeared to be extremely limited, with only a single-digit number of individuals across a 100+ person sales organization (spanning SDRs, AEs, and even regional leadership roles) consistently achieving quota. This created a significant gap between the compensation narrative presented during recruiting and what was realistically achievable in practice for most employees. In my experience, success was heavily concentrated among a very small group of top performers, while the majority of the organization did not consistently reach target performance levels. This disconnect was further reinforced by long sales cycles, high expectations, and relatively short average tenure in go-to-market roles, which made sustained success difficult for many employees despite strong effort. In parallel, SDRs were consistently told there is a path into AE roles, but in practice that progression was rarely realized. I did not see meaningful examples of SDRs moving up during my tenure, and most seemed to cycle through the role relatively quickly. This created a gap between what was communicated during hiring and what actually happened, making advancement feel less attainable than it was presented to be. Sales process vs delivery readiness gap One of the most consistent challenges I observed was a disconnect between what was being sold and the organization’s ability to immediately deliver on those commitments. In a leadership or team setting, I was told directly in a meeting that client churn was approximately ~70%, with expectations that this could increase going into 2026. I cannot verify those figures independently, but that statement contributed to my concern about alignment between sales expectations and delivery outcomes. In practice, it often felt like deals were being agreed to during the sales process with confidence that the organization would “figure it out afterward,” with delivery teams then responsible for building or scaling support after contracts were already signed. From my perspective, this created ongoing strain on internal teams and contributed to inconsistent execution, as well as challenges in meeting the expectations that had been set during the sales process. Additionally, I observed that there appeared to be a strong emphasis on projecting success, scale, and capability in client-facing environments. In certain facilities such as the SOC/DOT, I noticed staffing that included a mix of security and non-security roles, which at times created the appearance of a larger or more specialized operational footprint during tours and walkthroughs than what functionally reflected day-to-day operations.

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