Pros
1. Pays generously 2. Super hard-working and talented SDRs
Cons
1. Challenging culture and leadership approach: - The culture is extremely performance-driven, but in practice it often feels more pressure-focused than growth-oriented. There’s a constant emphasis on exceeding extremely high expectations, which can make the environment feel more about avoiding mistakes than actually developing and succeeding. Communication from leadership is heavily centered on metrics and business outcomes, and often lacks the context or inspiration needed to keep teams genuinely motivated. - Coaching tends to focus heavily on KPI tracking and activity enforcement, with less emphasis on real development or strategy. There’s structure, but not always substance — more focus on what to do than why it matters or how to improve in a meaningful way. 2. Aggressive KPIs and workload expectations: - Daily activity expectations are extremely high and often unrealistic to execute in a thoughtful or effective way. Reps are expected to manage large books of business, many of which have limited true opportunity though, while still hitting very high outreach numbers across multiple channels. - This creates a volume-over-quality approach that leads to burnout internally and fatigue externally. Accounts get worked repeatedly, and outreach can start to feel more transactional than strategic, which likely impacts how the company is perceived by prospects (Rippling has become quite the laughing stock to many prospects due to the $300 gift cards and gifts reps are consistently offering to take a demo). On top of that, account distribution is spread thin, making it harder to focus on the opportunities that actually matter. 3. Heavy emphasis on activity over outcomes: - There is a strong focus on hitting every single KPI, sometimes at the expense of actual results. Even reps who hit or exceed quota are still held to strict daily activity metrics, which can feel misaligned with what should matter most — revenue. - The amount of reporting and daily admin work is also excessive. Reps are expected to provide constant updates and recaps to multiple levels of management, which takes away valuable selling time and adds to the already high-pressure environment. 4. Top-down decision-making structure: - Decision-making is highly centralized, with little room for flexibility at the manager level. Managers are often expected to execute rather than adapt, which limits their ability to support their teams effectively or respond to what’s actually happening on the ground. Overall: Compensation is strong, and people who are comfortable in highly structured, metrics-heavy environments may do well here. But for those looking for a more balanced culture with a focus on development, trust, and sustainable performance, this can be a tough place to work.