Sage reviews

3.5

63% would recommend to a friend

(5,260 total reviews)
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Steve Hare

70% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

Sage has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 5,260 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Sage employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informatique industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
1.0
May 16, 2018

A once great company now in terminal decline...

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Great people who are willing Sage to succeed • Good benefits and Pay • Sage Foundation is a great contributor to society

Cons

Appalling Senior Leadership CTO, CEO, CFO, and EVPs without exception. Most VPs are appalling leaders, with an ability to create the perfect conditions for sure-fire failure! We have a myriad of specialist VPs who focus on the minutiae of the business where these roles would have typically been fulfilled others as a part of their role, or by lesser roles. The business is so fragmented that it is impossible to move things forward supported by a blame culture that stems from the very top of the organisation. What the city analyst see in Sage is perplexing because new online solutions Accounting, Financials, and Enterprise (not really online) are a million miles away from where they need to be. Our competitors have us beaten here, yet there is naivety of the City to believe what our failed CEO & CFO says about our success and transformation. • We had some training needs in Q1, and have addressed these with Sales!?! Come on! • H1 We had some localised challenges and have taken decisive action!! Really! • We have the best business platform in Sage Business Cloud! Shoot Me! • We have invented a magical way to create value from nothing! Ok that isn’t true, but it may as well be. City Analysts!!! What the heck are you doing! Do your job! Ask some probing questions! And the golden thread will surely unravel. Make no mistake there has been a transformation, one to oblivion and insignificance. Our products need life support, so we invent a marketing term “Sage Business Cloud” to wrap these products up in a digestible diversion. Not only do we do this, but we then say it is growing by 57%! What does this mean, and where is this revenue coming from… growth? We fail slow and repeat frequently! Well as fast as slow failure will allow! Constantly putting barriers in the way of success, costs constraints, forced distribution, this is leading to attrition and paralysis. Getting new roles approved is like getting a meeting with the Pope. Yet we constantly push people into the lower performance curve resulting in our top performers leaving in addition to the ones we aggressively manage out of the business. We love to do acceleration cases, 99% of which result in nothing. Roll play: EVP: Wouldn’t it be great if we could deliver new product x to market in 6 months? Have a think about it and tell me what you need? Team: 1 week of intense activity EVP person, we have looked at the market and it is our view that to deliver a world beating product we would need 18 people for 6 months. EVP: Great we’ll give you 2 additional head, and oh we need the product in 6 weeks. [Cycle of failure to be repeated every 6 months…] We recently lost 30 execs from the business, and whilst I would not say all should not have left we have found ourselves in a frightening situation. 1. Majority of our established business leaders have left (decades of understanding) 2. We have an influx of VPs and EVPs who have little or no experience of Sage or indeed running any business of scale 3. The leadership capability within the business is at the lowest since our inception Steve Hare & Steven Kelly are delusional are lining their pockets for as long as they can, reaping from the suffering and destruction of a national treasure. Steve Hare was at the helm of Marconi during its demise and given the opportunity I believe he will do the same for Sage. I can see his LinkedIn strapline now “I have been instrumental in the demise of not one but two FTSE 100 companies, but don’t worry I did really well in the process 😉”. Steven Kelly, well what can I say! He is incredibly driven and blind to the fact he is driving the business to oblivion, he needs to be removed ASAP. Although I fear the damage is so severe now Sage will never recover.

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Sage Response
8y
Thanks for your review. Every decision that is made is meant to directly benefit our customers, our colleagues, and achieve our company goals. That includes hiring only high performing team members and ensuring the wellbeing of all 14,000 current colleagues from around the world who come to work every day, love what they do, and see our future as bright. All companies have room for improvement, so I invite you to share your perspective through our many internal channels where you can be heard. Although we think your review may not be a fair picture of Sage, we very much appreciate your choosing to be a part of the team.
1.0
Aug 9, 2018

Great people dealing with a management problem

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people in the front lines are unbelieveable. Hard working, kind, a lot of fun.

Cons

A legacy of poor leaders making costly poor decisions and the people in the front lines receive the impact. Layoffs happen multiple times per year and nothing ever feels stable. They also do these layoffs in a hugely inhumane way and severance is terrible (since they have to pay 6 months severance in UKI, they screw the US employees because they can). The leadership paints a rosy picture to your face but it’s not reality and they continue to make poor decisions because a) they’re unaware and choose to be, b) they’re unconcerned, c) they care more about personal perception and controlling a message than they do about really fixing a tough problem. They make their decisions based on pure numbers without education around what drives them, causing a lot of customer dissatisfaction (except for the super expensive, cheesy Xmas party where they gave us 2 drink tickets but spent all sorts of money on a huge, empty venue). Also the business silos are incredibly strong, so people make processes in a vacuum and do not care the impact it has on other teams. If the ultimate goal is revenue generation, there’s a complete misalignment across all the teams on this. Processes are inefficient, leaders argue constantly, and nothing gets improved towards driving that revenue goal. 100% budget cuts to the point where you can’t even do a very infrequent team lunch to try to thank people for their hard work. Morale is so low across the organization and no one is really accepting this or taking action to fix it. Beware!

1.0
Jul 31, 2018

A Titanic analogy - stay well away

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Colleagues work hard to try to keep themselves and the company afloat Flexible working if you're lucky to land in a team that allows you to be An inkling of recognition amongst certain management tiers (mainly People) that there is an actual crisis going on - they are now doing more in terms of asking for opinions with Pulse surveys every quarter. Although nothing has yet changed.

Cons

The resemblance to the Titanic is striking - a big giant, slowly sinking with everyone on board. People jumping off in a bid to be safe whilst an orchestra plays on, trying to remain oblivious to what is happening before their very eyes. It's a great pity to see so many intelligent, hard-working people all trying to do their best in this situation. No bonuses, technology from 12 years ago, budgets cuts left, right and centre. Travel bans, hiring bans. People being fired the same day as it's "Bring your kid to work". It all goes to show how out of touch some members of Sage management team are. Morale is at an all time low - our HR team has been depleted and their jobs moved to Poland. Trying to get anything done is just a huge effort that can take MONTHs to resolve, even the simplest of things. Revolving doors mean that people either leave on their own accord after 6 months of experiencing what it's like to work here, or are seen out of the door. We've all seen people be lured in from great companies to just leave within a few months. No summer party, probably no Christmas party. All renovations of Sage Newcastle office cancelled just after they started to save budget. The impending bell curve performance system that we are being told does not exist, but managers are asked to provide figures on when rating their teams. There have been talk of there being a new rating system - but as usual this has not materialised nor timing has been given for when it will.

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