Vera esperienza internazionale in un azienda in continua crescita - Sales Comarch Employee Review

5.0
31 May 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Azienda finanziariamente molto solida con grande liquidita' e con fatturato in continua crescita da 25 anni. - Prodotti IT innovativi e in continuo aggiornamento grazie a investimenti in R&D più alti della media - Management locale attento alle esigenze di ciascuno e sempre disponibile - Ottima possibilità di crescita per giovani talenti nell'area commerciale - Ambiente realmente internazionale con scambi continui con altri uffici nel mondo - Grandi investimenti in comunicazione e Marketing con la possibilità di essere il volto dell'azienda ai principali eventi di settore - Autonomia strategica e organizzativa della sede italiana in crescita - Training dipendenti ogni trimestre all'estero - Salari più altri della media

Cons

- Politica sui bonus vendite conservativa - Presenza di dipendenti Under 30 eccessiva - Comunicazione con l'HQ da migliorare - Welfare aziendale da migliorare

Explore other reviews about Comarch

5.0
6 May 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong product with knowledgeable employees Nice NYC location overlooking the harbor Small and friendly team Good market reputation with high profile customer brands

Cons

Working with HQ in central Europe can present time zones issues for west coast USA, but employees are flexible. Comarch USA doesn't benefit from all the support typically available to HQ employees

2.0
24 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Healthcare. Flexible hybrid schedule (flexibility is necessary when you’re expected to meet deadlines while working across time zones with teams entirely in Poland). You get a monthly health & wellness stipend (gym, etc.), which is nice — and may slightly offset the slow erosion of your sanity as you forget how a normal company operates efficiently and professionally.

Cons

They cut budgets, don’t provide basic tools required to do the job (unless we pay for them ourselves), and then roll out Google Workspace in a way that blocks every useful extension — so now we can’t even use apps to help move projects along or meet unrealistic deadlines and goals set by inexperienced, ego-driven leadership who are too afraid to listen to what people actually need to generate revenue. Oh, and that’s before they increase KPIs with zero justification. The company has been on a steep decline since layoffs, including people with actual experience and institutional knowledge who helped grow the US region. Now they’re trying to rehire people to replace them — because that’s obviously a smart and efficient strategy. Everything is in Poland. Everything. Tools, training, support, career growth — and half the meetings happen before the sun comes up. Even if you want to do the job you were hired to do, Poland requires you to outline every step and submit a request for them to create or execute it. If you try to just do the work yourself (basic work), you might get pushback for… doing your job. And don’t expect a meeting to communicate what you need — that won’t happen. Instead, it gets assigned elsewhere, creating “growth opportunities” for someone else. But hey, if you’re Polish and in Poland, at least you get development opportunities — so good for them, I guess. Leadership in Poland seems genuinely frustrated that U.S. teams want to do their jobs. The expectation is to either execute their plans or create a strategy for Poland to then work on and execute for you. Eventually, you realize you’re not using basic tools or best practices. When you leave (or plan to), you may need to brush up on your skills and remind yourself how a normal company operates.

4
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