Maybe you'll like it if you hate fair compensation and if you live to work - Software Engineer Veeva Systems Employee Review

1.0
5 Aug 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Company is very stable, for now at least. It's work you can feel good about doing. Can pick up good skills here. Some employees are pretty cool people. There was a time when schedules could be flexible, but I don't think that's the case anymore. Health insurance isn't too bad. Despite my overall impression of working here, I genuinely believe this company is providing great services and has a solid and stable future. Or at least it will if it fixes how employees are treated.

Cons

TL;DR: If you're familiar with "Goofus and Gallant" from Highlights magazine, then just think of good companies as Gallant and Veeva as Goofus. Low pay. Uses "our work is meaningful" mentality as a substitute for money, despite only the latter paying the bills. Not a great place to work if you want to feel valued. Good management should support you in your career growth. I never felt that support here. It was always about what good I can do for the team/company. And I know that's obviously why we're there as employees, but it always felt like a one-sided relationship. On related notes, internal transfers are extremely difficult, and pre-Veeva experience seems completely irrelevant for promotion consideration, even if you're down-leveled when hired. A good company culture encourages time off because a good company knows healthy, happy, and recharged employees are the most productive. PTO requests at Veeva feel like you're breaking rules. Not remote friendly. "Work anywhere" is simply untrue, unless Veeva has some different definition of "anywhere" that I don't know. I think they begrudgingly allowed more remote work during the pandemic and are now trying to figure out how to walk that all back. PTO was never truly "unlimited" despite what many others are saying. But it was "flexible" and never had a hard limit of 15 days. Recently they walked back the vacation+sick limited to 15, now I think it's just vacation. And it's not tracked, so there's no selling it back or carrying it over to next year. I don't know if they're still calling it flexible, but I sure hope not. Bad overworking culture with people working late into most evenings. It's only going to get worse with Vault CRM on the horizon. Already tight development timelines made significantly worse thanks to unstable environments. You can spend an entire day or more dealing with environment issues only to find out it's something completely unrelated to your work and out of your control. Uses "the market is bad" as an excuse to ignore employees' contributions and hard work. This place touts avoiding layoffs during rough times for engineers, but I believe they limit layoffs by letting natural attrition occur, thanks to an overall bad environment. Also, too many people here justify Veeva's nonsense by saying other companies are worse. Cool, other companies are definitely worse, but other companies are also better. Why not at least try to be like the better companies? "Other companies are worse" and "the market is bad" are not good reasons to disregard your employees. I think the problem is this place employs too many people who have never had another job, and I don't just mean interns and new grads. I mean people who were new grads here at one point and have stayed for years. This place also employs too many people who have only worked at significantly worse companies. There are so many ways Veeva can be better, and too many people don't seem to care because they don't know anything else or they only know worse. I was honestly so excited to work here and really wanted to make a lifetime career out of it. But everything here just got worse over time, until I eventually couldn't take it anymore.

Explore other reviews about Veeva Systems

5.0
29 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good company good benefits goid culture

Cons

Average pay tech stack lagging

1
2.0
13 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

WFH is a huge perk. If this ever goes away, it fundamentally changes the company culture — run! PTO between Christmas and New Years. Very few layoffs. Veeva doesn’t panic or resort to mass cuts when they need to cut costs. Most peers were genuinely amazing. People consistently went the extra mile for each other. Honestly, that teamwork is a big part of how Veeva has stayed afloat in recent years as leadership has become increasingly incompetent.

Cons

PTO: “Unlimited” in name only. It’s capped at 3 weeks unless an SVP ok’s it, and you can’t accrue or cash out. It used to be real unlimited PTO, but once people actually started taking time off post‑pandemic, leadership slammed the door shut. They tossed 5+ year employees an extra week to keep them quiet — conveniently, many of those folks are already in management. RAISES AND PROMOTIONS: Raises are basically cost‑of‑living scraps. Promotions are rare, political, and often handed out based on favoritism, not performance. They also squeeze one or two benefits out of the employees each year (MLK day, PTO, RSUs, training, etc...). MIDDLE MANAGEMENT: A full-on top‑down echo chamber. The job is to nod, agree, and drink the Kool-Aid. Independent thought is treated like a problem. TECHNOLOGY: Veeva is not a tech company. They cling to outdated systems until they’re literally at end‑of‑life. Innovation is an afterthought. They’re late to AI and seem fine with it. CULTURE AND CHAOS: The entire philosophy is “results now, thinking later.” It’s chaos management without any of the parts that make chaos management functional. No learning, no resilience, no trust, no team building — just chaos, pressure, and panic. Instead of building a stronger organization, they now try to hire superhumanly anti-fragile people and call it “people science,” then put them through seven interviews to prove they can survive the dysfunction leadership refuses to fix. Unscheduled tasks, conflicting priorities, half‑baked features, unstable infrastructure, surprise “urgent” requests, and change orders that appear out of thin air. The company lives in a permanent MVP mindset. About 75% of releases are fast trash — “get it right next time.” Because everything is treated like a disposable prototype, there’s no real engineering structure behind most of it. False urgency is the fuel, and speed is the only metric that matters. It works well for a brand‑new feature, but at the infrastructure, security, platform, and technology level, it’s a slow‑motion disaster: technical debt, knowledge debt, risk, and stress piling up with every release. Veeva also uses a “burn the bridge behind you” engineering method. They’ll deploy unfinished products, features, or infrastructure changes into production and then force engineering to scramble to fix the fallout before the next release. Planning, design, forethought, process — all optional. HOLIDAYS: They eliminated MLK Day with almost no notice and offered nothing in return. LEADERSHIP REPRESENTATION: My VP somehow managed to avoid having a single woman as a direct report. He has over 12 direct reports. Statistically interesting. If you can survive and even thrive in chaos — and accept leadership treating chaos as a strategy — you can last here with less layoff anxiety than most software companies. Just drink the Kool‑Aid, keep your head down, and never point out incompetence. Leadership never admits mistakes, and employees are expected to quietly absorb the fallout. Veeva hires a very specific type of worker: competent but trappable, conscientious, passive to authority, and ideally a bit desperate. They avoid candidates with highly marketable skills, cut training, discourage advanced degrees, and screen for people who can tolerate dysfunction without pushing back. Conscientious employees work hard, pick up the slack, and keep the mission even when burned out. Engineering once had enough growth and autonomy to offset the chaos. Now chaos has scaled while teams haven’t, and burnout plus overscheduling have erased the ability to improve anything. Ten‑plus weekly “status” meetings leave no time to think. A good manager can make the experience workable, especially early in your career, but long‑term growth is limited. Once you’re stuck, Veeva squeezes you with low pay, no promotions, and the expectation you’ll keep absorbing chaos. The Public Benefit Corporation structure is part altruism, part armor — it reduces layoff pressure and shields the CEO from outside accountability.

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