Smartsheet reviews

3.3

43% would recommend to a friend

(1,288 total reviews)
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Rajeev Singh

26% approve of CEO

33% positive business outlook

Smartsheet has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 1,288 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Smartsheet employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
May 23, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Platform is absolutely amazing (one of the best I've seen) and truly delivers. 2. Some amazing talent has landed in frontline 3. Benefits are decent

Cons

1. Toxic culture 2. Senior leadership chooses ignorance 3. Burnout 4. Bullying 5. Lack of diversity 6. Lack of empathy 7. Inefficient tools 8. Lack of transparency 9. Non-existent work/life balance & so many more... Sexism, nepotism, cronyism... Just a few of the cultural experiences you're likely to encounter right now working in Frontline Support at any level--especially if you're a female and/or minority that refuses to play a part in perseverating the toxic culture that's been cultivated there. While bullying behavior may have been instituted by previous leadership, remnants still remain and new leadership appears to be unbothered by the concept of investing any genuine time, attention or resources into making improvements for a team of talented individuals struggling to get through each day--concerns that fell on deaf ears when brought to senior leadership's attention. Simply delegating everything and assigning someone else's name to actionable items is NOT enough. Roll up your sleeves, put down your Starbucks and spend some time with the individuals (FRONTLINE) who care enough about the platform and our customers to sacrifice their well-beings to admirably represent Smartsheet despite unhealthy department-wide conditions. The reality is, teams are self-destructing, managers are beyond frustrated with the lack of autonomy to make healthy choices for their direct reports, support specialists are crying at their desks at home and having panic attacks due to an unhealthy level of pressure/workload, and a growing number of people (from specialists through middle management) are taking an increased number of mental health days simply to get by.  This is not a result of the pandemic, though one would hope companies would show greater care in a time like this, it is a direct result of the culture within Smartsheet Support. The department is broken and a wave of attrition has already begun due to burnout (ironic that the decision was recently made to end weekly emails detailing entrances and exits). It will continue to increase unless senior leadership starts valuing individuals on the frontline as much as they do sharing "good news stories" in QBRs, All Hands and on LinkedIn. While leadership may spin tales that those of us that have left were simply "unhappy", they're right! The truth is we were incredibly unhappy with and unwilling to continue to be a part of the problem since we were not allowed to be a part of a solution.  I'm not referencing complicated issues, I'm talking about things like: 1. Being understaffed (unchanged staff numbers vs. increased customer volume = an imbalance in work per head) despite verbally being told otherwise 2. Schedules historically being poorly aligned to meet service levels (resulting in those working prime business hours being stuck on intense back-to-back calls and working overtime every day to wrap) 3. Literally no emphasis or expenditure on building department morale 4. A constantly growing backlog for which all frontline is being held accountable (check FCR and the volume of reply/received by individual and the story of origin is obvious) 5. A complete lack of trust that managers (despite verifiable/quantifiable proof otherwise and formal training) can situationally manage their teams 7. Bullying behavior by other cross-functional leaders towards Support 8. Workload demands dictated without any feedback from teams, which reflect an obvious lack of understanding of what frontline actually does (for example: 25+ hrs of Prodesk is too much) 9. Zero skip-levels between new leadership and existing management close to frontline 10. A shockingly uncouth handling by new leadership of every difficult situation that has surfaced over the last 2.5 months 11. Lack of diversity and zero sensitivity around diversity (the former head of DEI quit in less than a year) 12. Complete lack of work/life balance (if you don't expect people to work on the weekends, don't ping them and ask them to deliver things over the weekend) 13. Total disregard for the fact that we are a GLOBAL team and not everyone lives in PST (regularly scheduling meetings hours after local business hours and telling management they should all function on PST is ridiculous and not in line with other comparable global businesses) 14. Raising issues puts a major target on your back (many of us experienced this directly) In a department where honesty is met with aggression, kowtowing to outrageous demands (even at the sacrifice of others) is rewarded, and a complete lack of transparency prevails; no healthy, empathic person can possibly last for long--especially in leadership--since those of us who were willing to be honest quickly earned reputations.

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Smartsheet Response
4y
Our culture is a priority and something we’re invested in building into all parts of an employee’s Smartsheet experience. We welcomed a new VP of Support in February, and her first 90 days were spent observing and learning our business, while also tackling the most critical issues impacting our customers and employees. This new leader is prioritizing the health of the organization and is currently working closely with HR and Support leaders to develop an action plan on how to build an inclusive and collaborative environment that resonates across the entire Support organization. We’re proud to offer a comprehensive suite of well-being and health (including mental health) benefits, and we must foster an environment where employees feel comfortable and supported in taking advantage of what’s available to them. We know that as our business continues to rapidly grow, so too must our workforce—to better support not just the needs of our business but also the needs of our employees in balancing their workloads. I welcome employees to share their feedback so we can continue to improve in these areas. —Mike Arntz, CRO and EVP Worldwide Field Operations
5.0
May 5, 2021

First impression = great!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Very impressed with recruiting and interview process; experienced best communication during interview process compared to any other company I've pursued in past - Really great benefits and comp (now have a 401k match that other reviewers mentioned was missing) - Helpful onboarding materials, product training - Very welcoming colleagues excited to help me succeed and get to know me as a person - Open to input on processes that need fixing or improved; early indication of growth mindset is encouraging - Supportive of flexible, hybrid work post-pandemic

Cons

- Rapid growth, hiring means many co-workers are also new and learning - PTO is below industry standards (but have heard it's being evaluated with improvements coming) - Too many tech tools for efficient workflow (Slack, G Chat, Google Meet, Zoom, Workplace by Facebook, Smartsheet...)

1.0
Oct 28, 2016

Consistent Poor Practices

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great tea selection in office - Paid garage parking - Great office in Bellevue

Cons

- Documented history of seeing employees as seat fillers rather than people - Repeated practice (in my tenure of less than a year I counted this happening eight times across multiple departments) of firing employees without cause, feedback and prompting for change, or any care of the impact on an individual's life (for instance a severance of two weeks pay, no health coverage, or cash out of vacation / sick time) - salary about 5-10k below industry standard - I was awarded a bonus based on performance every quarter I was with the company, had an extensive sheet of detailed customer praise, direct words from the Director of my department "Great work with this account!" and feedback from a customer : "This employee was outstanding. They knew an answer to every question and expertly helped me figure out everything." And two days later was fired for the reason of "poor performance" I would love to strongly caution any candidate before considering a role with this company making sure you ask yourself - what's important to you in life and how far off is Smartsheet from that?

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Smartsheet Response
9y
Deciding to terminate an employee is serious and difficult, but we do not shy away from making these tough calls. We strive to be very direct with feedback so that team members have the opportunity to improve. Sometimes team members and leadership do not share the same view of the circumstances -- and without alignment, finding a path forward is often not possible. Smartsheet has grown from 30 employees to over 400 over the past four years. We want to continue to build a team of high-performers who are curious, bright, driven, and passionate. We would encourage all candidates to do the homework you suggest -- think about the opportunity Smartsheet offers you, and what you can bring to our team. And for those who want to lead -- ask yourself if you’re ready to set strategy, inspire and serve your team, and build solid cross-functional relationships. Our voluntary attrition rate is under 9% in a very competitive market. I'm proud to support such a dedicated team. Thanks for taking the time to comment. --Mark Mader, President & CEO
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