I absolutely love it here (but you may not) - Senior Software Engineer CrowdStrike Employee Review

5.0
7 Oct 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I'm extremely pro-CRWD, both as a company and in terms of its future. Overall, I feel happy to work here, but there are definite things to improve upon which could change my rating in the future: - Pay is pretty good (although not FAANG), and the quarterly bonus payout is a really cool feature - ESPP is awesome (15% discount w/lookback) - Best onboarding of my career, bar none - There are simply a lot of hard-working and kind people around. - Remote-first culture - Generally, work-life balance is good. This is my first company where I'm never bothered on the weekends or after hours. - Overall, the future is bright! - This is going to sound Kool-aidy, but it's the best cybersecurity company in the industry. Our product basically sells itself.

Cons

When I was writing this out there were more things than I initially thought, but here goes: - I understand the pressure that leadership is under. They serve two masters: we need to fulfill our mission and keep our customers safe, but also continue to grow as fast as we can, and while our customers and Wall Street frequently overlap in what they want and need, sometimes those goals don't always align. Depending on who you ask, there are a lot of focus areas and a ton of priorities. 5 year plans. Speeches at quarterly All hands. Corporate and team goals, and it gets dizzying. The message is often unclear. - I haven't been here forever, but while CrowdStrike has a ton of great people, it's filled with more than its fair share of "rest and vest" pre-IPO veterans who like to sit and complain about the good ol' days, even though they don't seem to produce much at all. - To the point above, while I haven't been here forever, in the years I've been here what I have seen is a leadership pullback. As the company's grown, there have been more unannounced re-orgs, execs leaving, and this and that happening with little or reactive communication, which leaves everyone wondering what's up and looking over their shoulder. Corporate comms needs to be re-done with a much clearer focus on transparency. - There is little to no training for managers, and managers aren't evaluated at all on how good they actually are as managers, so it's kind of a roll of the dice in terms of how effective your manager is and how they'll advocate for you. - Related to the above, I cannot explain to you how and why some people get promoted and others don't. There is no track or defined process, so it's very much up in the air behind a secretive and often delayed annual merit cycle. A lot of people were frustrated this year. - Speaking of, merit raises haven't been great lately. If I end up leaving, that will be why. Please give your top performers an incentive to stay! - There's no educational reimbursement at all. - 401k is embarrassingly bad for a company of our size with the revenue we generate.

Explore other reviews about CrowdStrike

5.0
2 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great place to work at

Cons

No cons at all for me

3.0
27 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work culture Is excellent, innovative tech, company's growth and opportunities to protect clients. Felt fortunate to have worked for this organization that has a strong growth tragectoruy and protects clients.

Cons

Manager/Director level: Poor communication from team manager/director, with little to no direction and the lack of team morale. Team members were on their own after training and most meetings could've been an email. The presence of the director was the equivalent of a virtual bulletin board. No ownership was taken from management to lead or guide the team and no sense of loyalty exists between management and team members. Good talent was squandered due to complacency and lack of direction. Company: Con for the company is the unfortunate lay offs that happened after leaving the company. It's a shame they laid off veterans from my former team. The writing on the wall was apparent, from outsourced new hires to the non-competitive compensation for newer hires. The company went from a fun and competitive start up to a disconnected company trying to emulate tech industry trends and "balances the budget" AKA lay offs, to look good to share holders. For a company that nets huge profits year after year, layoffs shouldn't be part of the reality.

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