Hunger Games - Anonymous employee Sunrun Employee Review

2.0
28 Aug 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Sunrun is a high-growth company with tenacity and passion. There are lots of opportunities to do meaningful work. It is a great office space with a convenient location.

Cons

Business ideas are kicked around in a shark tank style. The best idea wins, and the person who pitched it gets to run it. Or so they think. But really what is perceived as "the best idea" is also wrapped up in a lot of bias. This company is run by white males of a certain pedigree. Don't be fooled by the female CEO. Females with great ideas are often challenged, while males with the same idea meet zero resistance and are praised. Employees are viewed as replaceable - simply a means to an end. Business units are incentivized to care about only their own metrics. So all initiatives at the company are viewed as a zero-sum game: your win is my loss. Business units are often cannibalizing each other. Working here feels like a real-life version of The Hunger Games.

Explore other reviews about Sunrun

5.0
22 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great leadership, incurred earning potential.

Cons

Weekly trainings can be redundant.

2.0
18 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Here’s a more candid version: The team is generally positive and easy to work with. This can be a decent role if you’re early in your career or closer to the end of it. You can make good money if you end up on the right team and fit the profile they tend to value.

Cons

There are a lot: There is also a strong pyramid-scheme-like culture. During interviews, candidates are sold on the idea of making six figures, but that outcome is not fully within the employee’s control because compensation depends on opportunities and customer signatures. That creates a mismatch between the promise presented upfront and the reality of how pay is actually earned. Opportunities are created by convincing a Lowe’s or Home Depot customer to schedule an appointment. Customer signatures generate only a small upfront amount, while the larger commission is paid later, after the solar system is installed, at $50 per kilowatt. Since the install can take one to three months, there is plenty of time for an employee to be terminated before earning full commission. In practice, many factors outside the salesperson’s control can delay or block installation. The company sends an “expert” to close the lead, and there are often many reasons an install may not move forward. As a result, if someone is not favored by management, they may be assigned to a low-traffic store. If they do make sales but still fail to meet aggressive goals, they can be fired. That creates a hire-many, keep-the-top-performers, and avoid-paying-commission dynamic.

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