ZoomInfo reviews

3.8

74% would recommend to a friend

(2,175 total reviews)
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Henry Schuck

79% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

ZoomInfo has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 2,175 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ZoomInfo employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
Jan 18, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

ZoomInfo still retains its market leadership and strong product/market fit. Depending on your book of business, and especially if you’re ramping, you can overachieve your bonus and make good money initially. Leadership is very involved in communicating with customers for risk renewals and upsells.

Cons

This is a top-down toxic (lack of) culture that suffers from an antiquated weekend-warrior mentality that impacts all employees but especially sales org. The culture here is this: we have the best products, and competitors suck. That’s it! You can join employee-founded clubs, but you’re so burnt out from your regular AM workload, endless biweekly manager forecast linearity meetings and 1000+ person canned enablement webinars that you’ll be maxed out for any extracurricular activity. Our CEO is begrudgingly opposed to hybrid work and was pressed due to market conditions (and the reality they hired so many remote folks during pandemic) to accept it. Simply put, they’d rather you sit on zoom meetings at a desk in an office (since teams are not GEO based and scattered across US) for the sake of control rather than adapt to the times and admit that a remote workforce for inside sales teams in inevitable. Historically they do not respect your family time around the holidays, and if an “end of month” falls on a weekend, they reward reps who sandbag deals until the last day, to harass clients to docusign over the weekend. Managers and directors are culturally incentivized to only speak about team numbers during standups and org meetings. No sharing of tribal knowledge, what’s working, why we win/lose etc. ICs just sit and check out as management narrates the daily progress against manager goals, and dashboards we all have visibility into anyways. The only space created to supposedly collaborate with peers to sharpen your skills is allocated in the form of 1000+ person enablement webinars from recycled sales methodologies like MEDDIC where there’s no real opportunity to practice and apply the concepts. Virtual quizzes are not how anyone grows their skills. It’s from exposure to your peers and what winning looks like. Nepotism at its finest here, path to promotion functions like a chaotic startup and there’s constant reorgs so there’s no effective way to handle this. If your VP likes you, like for example if you close a short-term deal which boosts the management number but tanks your net retention a few months later, that’s a great scenario where you’ll be praised and then two months later when your retention tanks you’ll be responsible for backfilling massive holes in revenue. Clearly this company is a revolving door. In the last two months or COO/President, VP of DaaS, CGO have left the company, with other senior leadership on the way out. Let’s face it, even ICs can tell that our CEO does not grant leadership any autonomy to own their org’s strategic vision and execution. You’ll be promoted one half and on a pip the next. The old saying “you’re just a number” is never truer than at this company. For years we were forced to oversell small and medium companies all of the acquired products. Often this would look like management insisting you sneak a product SKU into a renewal to boost those emerging product dollars. With that unsustainable approach, 2023 was a year of unprecedented churn, and while our CEO goes on MSNBC to “own it” (simple, a SaaS seat-based product is in less demand when companies have less workers in those positions) you’ll be accountable for the massive churn that was transferred into your book at the new fiscal boom-shuffle. It’s Russian roulette where there’s 4 bullets in the chamber. Good luck!

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ZoomInfo Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to leave a review about your experience at ZI. Our hybrid model was designed to build relationships, drive collaboration and maintain culture. And we recently expanded on our RTO model, taking our engagement survey and roundtable feedback into consideration and have launched Flexible Work Arrangements (FWA) and rolled out a new policy that is giving tenured and high-performing in-office employees more location flexibility as well as commuter benefits! About the perception of nepotism, we require all candidates to go through multiple rounds of interviews with multiple people and nobody manages their family members or makes any decisions about compensation, job promotion, retention, or the decision of whether or not we terminate them if that time comes. Decisions are based on merit, experience, adding to the culture, competence, and work ethic–all things I think you probably also value and bring to ZI. As for our company focus, we want to create incredible, long-term, durable value with our customers. Our goal together is to solve hard problems, row in the right direction, and have customers who trust us and love our products and services! Thank you for sharing your thoughts, and we will use them to drive positive change within our organization. We are always open to new ideas or alternatives so please feel free to reach out confidently to your Human Resources Business Partner to share any idea you feel can add value to ZI. Thank you!
2.0
Feb 5, 2023

Doesn’t care about employees.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-unlimited pto (with black out dates) -pretty cool team leads/managers -good product

Cons

Do not trust management. They’ll offer you promotions with no raise in pay. During Q4 there’s a blackout for vacation over the holidays, even though in certain departments it’s pretty slow. The pay was below market. CEO/Upper management sent out emails in December about how to not worry about layoffs, they were responsible and didn’t over hire. Less than a month later, several hundred people were quietly laid off. In order to get your two week severance you had to sign a document saying you wouldn’t tell anyone about being laid off, or they would make you pay it back.

1.0
Jul 12, 2022

Pure, unadulterated hell

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Some decent perks and bennies - Excellent sales methodology training and development - *some* creative ways to incentivize performance or deal influence (with a catch) - Proven product, leader in the data brokerage space with great market fit

Cons

- Micromanagement to the nth degree - Good ol' boys frat house sales bro culture, abysmal gender equity - Insulting pay disparity between two people doing the same jobs - Some foolish reps running on a steady diet of Kool-Aid fed to them by ZI leadership - "Unlimited" PTO is actually "uncapped" but it is very limited. Little to no PTO granted towards the end of each month nor the ENTIRE MONTH of December. - One of those sales orgs will capriciously change your comp plan and from what I've witnessed will fight you tooth and nail to contort what they should pay you once you leave - Nothing in the tech stack works seamlessly and usually takes several days to fix once multiple people complain about the same issue. - Worst onboarding experience I've ever seen in several years in tech - Lack of fluidity in sales ops that creates obstacles rather than enables the ability to influence deals in a positive way, causes friction between reps - Lack of accountability from the lead gen team to properly qualify leads - Management often serves as a mouthpiece for the Scrooges up top, who lead from the rear, causing them to not only be disconnected but entirely self-serving. - Be ready to leave here with a brown nose and a knife in your back, culture encourages it - Sales leadership is scratching their heads how to incentivize their reps, at least in the segments I've been associated with, yet they throw so many of the above in, they just end up driving people into silos, discouraging group participation, and ultimately demotivate their reps

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ZoomInfo Response
3y
Hello, thanks for this feedback and your compliments about our product and training programs. From your review, I gather you are experiencing some frustration in your current position. My goal is for everyone in my org to find the right fit and reach their goals. Many of the concerns you voiced surprised me, as I have not heard them echoed in other corners of the New Sales group. If you feel comfortable with it, I would really like to chat about how we can work together to make this right and hear more about your concerns. I can’t promise that I’ll be able to fix everything – for example, our PTO black-out dates are pretty standard for the tech sales industry – but I’d like to address what I can. If you don’t feel comfortable coming to me, please do reach out to your HR Business Partner. As you know, our mantra is to get 1% every day. We can only improve with open and honest communication. Thanks again for bringing these topics to our attention. – Steven Bryerton, ZoomInfo Senior Vice President of New Sales
Viewing 43 - 45 of 2,175 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,223 ZoomInfo reviews submitted anonymously by ZoomInfo employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if ZoomInfo is right for you.