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Tableau Software

Part of Salesforce

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Tableau Software reviews

3.8

70% would recommend to a friend

(1,147 total reviews)
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Mark Nelson

70% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Tableau Software has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 1,147 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Tableau Software employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informatique industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
2.0
Oct 9, 2018

Positives are only surface deep

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Tableau is an exciting company to join at first. They do a great job at selling you on the whole "we are changing the world and are uniquely positioned to do so" narrative that so many software companies present to their employees and customers. There are also a solid group of very smart people to learn from scattered about the company.

Cons

Some sense of cockiness may have been acceptable in the early days of "self-service" BI tools, but the competitive landscape had changed greatly and competitive products are catching up rapidly in terms of capability and value. The dismissive attitude towards all competition seems to have led to a number of toxic cultural attributes such as an undue sense of superiority by members of the sales force who "won" consistently in the early days when Tableau was the only "drag and drop" BI tool around. These reps now maintain very preferential territories with cherry-picked accounts across multiple territories. This compounds the problem further as their success is artificially inflated, they are not forced to implement or create new strategies in order to succeed, and it fosters an undue sense of superiority. While management insists that all territories are divided as equally as possible based on unbiased data, I've seen the process and assure you that favoritism is heavily in play and it's not all "data-driven". Another huge area of concern is how they are implementing their "diversity and inclusion" initiative. I believe in D&I programs and the value behind them, but they need to be well thought-out and executed in order to make sure it actually accomplishes the underlying goals or the program. Tableau's efforts here are.... disturbing. Instead of a slow-burn of education, discussions and panels to help educate the company on the value of diversity and recognition of unconscious bias, they are simply dictating to hiring managers and they don't want white males. I was told verbatim by an HR representative when looking for a new member of my team "remember, we don't want to hire someone who.... looks like that (motioning to a white male team member)" This comment almost made me sick on the spot. Is that "inclusion"? Another "inclusion" problem they have is around personality types. They seem to find value only in people that have bright, bubbly, overly-positive personalities. They want people with huge mouth-open smiles taking selfies with their (non white-male) friends in front of Tableau logos. That's not a bad thing for advertising, but a successful company takes all kinds. Some of the smartest people I know (and even very successful sales people) have been quiet and introspective

1.0
Oct 9, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

People used to be good, till they all left

Cons

No pay increases to compensate performance and inflation Clients are leaving and the retention rate is no longer advertised Stagnent product development, Microsoft and Qlik have now surpassed Tableau on Gartner magic quadrant.

2.0
Oct 7, 2018

Not worth it!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A sales job at Tableau is usually pretty easy to get, just memorize a demo and you're in! It actually is a great product, so the conversations you'll have with customers are enjoyable. The office is cool and in a nice location. Work-life balance is good.

Cons

Since the job is so easy to get, you'll often find yourself surrounded by people that bring so little to the table that it makes you question your own career choices. Then there's the micromanagement, which one finds at every company with a few thousand people, but Tableau takes the cake; there are so many layers and so many "managers" that add absolutely no value (unless, of course, value is defined as lowering employee morale). Career progression hardly exists in the sales org. Sure, some roles have been created to be able to "progress" people, but the harsh reality is that there are not a lot of people that truly move up the ladder. What makes the situation more unfortunate, is that those people are almost exclusively the ones that spend more time on office politics than with their clients. Combine all of the above with pay that is well below the industry standard and you'll understand why a company with a great product and nice office has such a low Glassdoor score and why people are constantly leaving.

Viewing 634 - 636 of 1,147 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,250 Tableau Software reviews submitted anonymously by Tableau Software employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Tableau Software is right for you.