1980's style CAD sales with lack of care for employees - Inside Sales Representative Hawk Ridge Systems Employee Review

1.0
10 Aug 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Hawk Ridge consistently wins awards for top SolidWorks reseller in the world. - Social Engineers can succeed here and launch into other careers. the most outgoing engineer with a willingness to go the extra mile for demonstrations, blog posts, beta testing, etc. seems to do better on yearly reviews.

Cons

Most salespeople and management are low-quality, ego-driven, insecure, impulsive, untrained, lack career mobility, lack critical forms of leadership, uneducated, and function as babysitters. With the exception of certain teams, there is a culture of apathy, lack of teamwork, zero interest in quality, and absolutely no accountability. -NO 401K MATCHING. - HR violations will happen daily, and HR is a complete joke - you still force 43 year old adult men/women to share cheap hotel rooms on business trips - management team is over their heads. - Work is a depleting, dispiriting experience. Management believes people are motivated by $10 starbucks gift cards, slang terms muttered to customers while the phone is on mute, and drinking in the parking lot is fine as long as your hitting your numbers. Its not, people notice. - offices are dusty relics of the 1990’s. Quit getting cheap on everything

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Hawk Ridge Systems Response
9y
"HR violations" is not really enough information for us to take action but I have two thoughts: first, I rely on employees to let me know what is going on. All reported issues are investigated, but of course we would not necessarily share the actions that are taken. If the affected employee is not satisfied, they have the option of coming back to me or going to an owner. Second, I realize that talking at work may not be ideal. My office phone goes directly to my cell phone so you can reach me at any time. If you want to discuss something privately I am happy to talk after hours. While we sometimes ask employees to do reviews, I am pretty sure that does not make it fake! I have read your review many times now and you have raised some serious concerns. I am discussing this with Dale and the sales managers. Thank you for your feedback.

Explore other reviews about Hawk Ridge Systems

5.0
18 Feb 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Trustworthy leadership, and continued growth.

Cons

Inefficient at times due to the rapid growth.

1.0
9 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work, benefits, handful of exemplary middle management employees who want to help but aren’t given the agency to change what’s needed

Cons

Lack of mentorship, training or playbooks in general. The root of this issue is that you have management that doesn’t know the full scope of each employee’s role amidst the ever-changing misguided directives from the CRO. This leads to a number of inefficiencies and poor process management, causing mistakes that ultimately hurt profit and overall morale. The Revenue Operations Dept. funnily enough, seems to be completely siloed from the CRO. Because the changes we see often aren’t mentioned before the decision has been finalized. Even with the ever-changing, misguided attempts from the top, the RevOps team has an excellent handle on how to run an efficient, knowledgeable team that manages to strike a good work-life balance. The rest of the org has a long way to go. I’ve been in two other positions in other departments and there’s a let’s “throw it at the wall and see if it sticks” mentality. Zero playbooks, zero updated training guides outside of org-wide general docs -nothing role-specific for onboarding that’s up to date because I know there’ll be someone out there on HR reading this who thinks otherwise. Because no, “processes change so much it’s hard to keep things up to date” is the oldest excuse in the book for Hawk Ridge. Furthermore, regarding training, the employees that new hires shadow shouldn’t have to bear the responsibility of training when they’re expected to hit quota with a book of 500+ accounts. To be fair, quota is doable if you have the right territory, but it takes every second of your 40 hours. It becomes impossible when a manager places their responsibilities on someone who is expected to carry a quota. There is a pattern of kiss up, kick down in middle management that has become more evident to upper management, thankfully. However, knowing about it doesn’t do a whole lot when employees remain unprotected when it comes time for a PIP. It has become evident that they are a native offshore contractor company going forward. All roles are being sourced off shore for cheap labor. No department is exempt at this point. Because of this, it’s harder to justify to management that you deserve a raise even when you are excelling and bringing a solution-oriented attitude to the table. It doesn’t quite matter. You could message just about any employee on LinkedIn that’s been there for more than 3 years or so to ask them how they feel and I can almost guarantee you that the vast majority would loudly agree with the offshoring and kiss up kick down sentiments. The turn over is a major problem organizationally but it seems like that’s what they want at this stage. Why pay $100k for a US employee when you can pay someone overseas for $20k? At times, it seems their resolution is to make it so that someone wants to quit so that they can either make another US employee absorb those responsibilities without backfilling or backfilling with someone who is a fraction of the cost.

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