Pluspunten
Coworkers are amazing / No Draw / So much "free" swag! / Weekly meals and tons of snacks
Minpunten
There are several serious concerns that potential applicants should be aware of before considering a role at Filevine—particularly within the sales organization. These issues deserve careful study and reflection, as they point to systemic challenges in leadership, culture, and expectations. 1. Work-Life Balance Is Virtually Nonexistent Despite a required 9-hour in-office workday, there is an unspoken expectation to continue working after hours. The fully in-person setup—without flexibility—drains time and energy, turning an already long day into an 11+ hour commitment when factoring in commute and additional evening work. 2. Toxic Management Practices & Burnout Culture Mid-level management is perhaps the most significant issue. Rather than using data and performance trends to inform leadership decisions, they operate under a churn-and-burn mentality. Performance Improvement Plans (PIPs) are handed out arbitrarily—often after a single off-month—without prior coaching or development conversations. It feels less like a professional workplace and more like a fraternity hazing ritual. 3. Unrealistic Quotas & Misaligned Incentives For such a niche product, the sales quotas are significantly above industry averages for SaaS companies. SDRs are pushed to chase low-quality leads—such as no-show or cold inbound opportunities—instead of being given realistic, pipeline-focused goals that would allow for true outbound strategy and prospecting. 4. Dysfunctional SDR-AE Collaboration The relationship between SMB SDRs and SMB AEs is fragmented and ineffective. Instead of working closely with a small group of AEs (as is standard in most SaaS orgs), SDRs are assigned leads through a round-robin system across ~20 AEs. This makes it nearly impossible to build rapport, develop communication rhythms, or strategize effectively. It creates a competitive rather than collaborative environment, where alignment suffers and results decline. 5. Leadership Disconnect There’s a genuine sense of sympathy for frontline managers, who seem to bear the brunt of poor decisions made at higher levels. Directors appear resistant to making necessary adjustments—even when those changes would directly improve morale, performance, and retention.