Acquia Reviews

3.8

54% would recommend to a friend

(577 total reviews)

Chris Tranquill

98% approve of CEO

43% positive business outlook

Acquia has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 577 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Acquia employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

577 reviews
5.0
29 Sept 2019

Pursuit of digital experience

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Comes from an Open Source origin. Has a great DNA and ambition pursuit of the next big thing.

Cons

Has grown fast and has painful parts because of it. Could be more open in a lot of ways.

1.0
16 Dec 2015

UK office is as bad as it gets

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The open-source community behind Drupal is great and some of that culture trickles into the Reading office. You really feel and understand it more when in the US. Love the support and tech side of the company. Proximity to the centre of Reading isn't bad either.

Cons

Too many to mention but I'll give it a try. A very authoritarian culture on the sales side of things with loads of company politics. Acquia has by far the worst culture I've ever experienced at a company. It often feels like mid management is actively trying to set you up for failure. People are very rarely recognised for doing great thing and often punished for things out of their control. Don't expect much training or mentorship as they've gotten rid of everybody that provided that, either by making them redundant or by bulling them until they leave. I honestly wouldn't recommend anybody to work here. I hope the culture changed since I worked there but I highly doubt it based on the people still employed.

avatar
Acquia Response
10y
Thank you for taking the time to write this review. Obviously disappointing from my perspective, it would be very helpful to listen first hand to your thoughts. The HR team in Reading knows how to reach me. Your positive comments about our tech staff are greatly appreciated. To your point on training, we just completed an extensive training program in Boston, flying sales and marketing teams in from around the world. We also recently announced the Acquia Academy, which is online training for both non-technical and technical roles, managers and individual contributors. Next week we are launching a “pulse” performance review program, designed to get more feedback to employees on a more consistent, more frequent basis. We are also recruiting a new head of marketing for Europe. Our head of global field is going to be in the UK in the early spring. We’ve agreed that he will spend time 1:1 with the sales team with the hope of uncovering any further issues. Tom Erickson, CEO
2.0
18 Apr 2020

A hostile environment to women, open source, and technical thought leadership

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

100% remote for many positions and "take it as you need it" vacation

Cons

I loved Acquia when I joined in the Burlington days and I was eager to learn from some of the best minds in Drupal and OSS. Fast forward several years later and it has become a very different company. Most of the thought leaders in Drupal and open source have moved on from Customer Success and Engineering and have not been replaced. The flagship product teams consider required security and package updates a feature release. Engineering leadership is comprised mostly of middle managers who started in junior technical roles in the early days of Acquia and have not improved their skillset in AWS / hosting / best practices since then, and haven't cared enough to find another job. While Customer Success does their best to both contribute to Drupal and resolve customers' Acquia product issues, it is incredibly difficult because challenges are often due to antiquated product architecture and engineering teams' ineptitude. Those who have tried to drive significant change have often been met with complacency and hostility. There are no women in technical leadership roles, and those who may have been on that path have been passed over for promotions and raises, talked down to in public forums/meetings, forced to justify their aptitude daily, and often forced to resign out of frustration because continuing to work at Acquia was hindering progress in their careers.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 577 Reviews

Glassdoor has 613 Acquia reviews submitted anonymously by Acquia employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Acquia is right for you.