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Check Point Software Technologies

Engaged employer

Awesome people, not many responsibilities, low pay, punctuated with constant demand for additional work hours. - Software Developer Check Point Software Technologies Employee Review

2.0
7 Aug 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people are great, and you will get to learn a lot if you're someone with no previous experience. Free lunch. ( well not really because you pay the taxes)

Cons

Constant demand for more work, as if 9 hours aren't already too much. Boring work - always working on something trivial. employer takes working on Fridays lightly. budget for the employees is laughable. The employer does very little for the employee yet the employee is expected to go the extra mile. Not a good place for people with experience.

Explore other reviews about Check Point Software Technologies

5.0
25 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It was fun to work there a lot of good experiences.

Cons

No cons i can tell

1.0
30 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The core responsibilities offer solid experience, and many team members are dedicated, talented, and great to work with.

Cons

Lack of HR Support: The company lacks a safe, objective framework for employee feedback. When legitimate management issues were raised to HR, no corrective action was taken. Instead, it resulted in direct retaliation from leadership, which was left unaddressed by the organization. Significant Under-Market Pay: Compensation is well below industry standards for similar scopes of work. To give context, transitioning into a comparable role at a different company yielded a 37% increase in base pay. Flawed & Inaccurate Sales Compensation: The commission and incentive structures for the sales organization are unnecessarily convoluted. This complexity frequently leads to errors in commission payouts, causing widespread frustration among sellers. Notably, these calculation mistakes are consistently detrimental to the employee and rarely seem to resolve in the seller's favor. Siloed "HQ-Centric" Culture: There is a heavy disconnect between corporate headquarters and regional teams. The culture feels highly insular, creating an "in-group" dynamic where those outside of headquarters have very limited visibility, influence, or opportunities for career progression.

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