Chaotic Leadership, Constant Comp Changes, Heavy Offshoring, and Declining Product Quality - Account Executive Motive Employee Review

1.0
13 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Was able to work remotely (but not anymore since they are transitioning to in-person) - Strong bond with colleagues through shared trauma

Cons

Heavy Offshoring and Declining Quality: Over time, a significant majority of roles were offshored, including SDRs, Customer Support, Engineering, Account Management, etc. 70% of Motive employees are now offshored. Let that sink in. While cost savings may have been achieved, the quality of execution declined noticeably. This was not just an internal frustration — customers explicitly voiced dissatisfaction with support quality, response times, and overall experience. Sales reps were left to manage fallout they did not create. A Company That Feels like a Ponzi Scheme For IPO: In my opinion and lived experience, Motive operates with a Ponzi-like IPO mentality. The company appears obsessed with growth optics, cost cutting, and metric manipulation to support an eventual public offering, while deprioritizing customers, employees, and long-term product quality. Decisions consistently favored short-term numbers over sustainable execution. Frontline teams and customers felt like collateral damage in the race to go public. Poor Territory and Nepotism: I was assigned roughly 120 accounts, many of which were out of segment, inactive, or no longer in business. Requests for account switching were denied, and the expectation became “figure it out yourself.” While the company claimed to have a fair inbound round-robin system, no reps had visibility into it — only leadership controlled access. As a result, there was zero transparency into how inbounds were actually distributed. Many reps who were supposedly part of the rotation went months without seeing an inbound, while a small group of leadership-favored reps appeared to receive inbounds consistently. Success felt driven less by territory design or execution and more by luck, opacity, and favoritism. Incompetent Enablement and Internal Chaos: Sales enablement and frontline management were severely lacking. Basic operational tasks (trials, order changes, Salesforce workflows) were unclear or inconsistently handled. Managers often lacked practical knowledge of core systems, forcing reps to spend excessive time troubleshooting internal issues instead of selling. Constant Comp Plan and Product Changes: Commission structures were changed repeatedly, often mid-stream. Fuel card compensation went from first-swipe payouts, to requiring certain spend % to being removed entirely — including for deals already being actively worked. These changes directly impacted earnings and undermined trust in leadership. Reps had little confidence that today’s plan would still exist tomorrow. Competitor Reality and Questionable Competitive Messaging: Internally, Motive constantly positioned itself as superior to Samsara, but in practice, Samsara consistently appeared to have better product quality, stronger customer support, and more stable execution. Customers frequently compared the two and voiced frustration with Motive’s experience. Motive leadership often referenced a third-party VTTI study to bash competitors, including Samsara. In my view, this study was presented in a highly selective and biased way (they literally paid VTTI), yet it was repeatedly used as a sales and internal talking point. Even with that narrative, customers still perceived Samsara as the stronger and more reliable platform.

avatar
Motive Response
1mo
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. We’re sorry to hear your experience has not met expectations. At Motive, we are cusotmer obsessed and that principle drives everything we do across product, operations, go-to-market, and more. As we’ve scaled, we’ve continued investing in product capabilities, customer support, and internal processes to improve the overall customer experience and will continue to do so as we grow. We also recognize that periods of growth and change can create complexity internally, and we are continuously working to improve clarity, enablement, and alignment across teams so employees are better supported in serving customers.

Explore other reviews about Motive

5.0
7 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Strong people and culture. Genuinely good colleagues, a collaborative environment, and a place where talented people want to do good work. After many years here, the quality of the people is the thing I'd point to first. Real mission and real product. The work matters — building technology that has a tangible safety impact in the physical world. That gives the work a sense of purpose that's hard to find elsewhere.

Cons

Leadership and organizational clarity could be stronger. As the company has grown, clearer direction, more consistent decision-making, and steadier organizational structure would help people do their best work. Uncertainty. Periods of structural and strategic change can create a sense of instability that's tiring over time, even for people who are otherwise very committed to the company.

1.0
6 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- great pay - decent benefits - unlimited PTO

Cons

I really think Motive is on the decline as a workplace. this was my first SDR job, the 4 week training was useless. Managers don't provide a lot of support. Our biggest competitor is basically equal to and almost better than Motive, so there's starting to be no point in targeting those accounts. The rest are old stubborn men that love their legacy systems. People are creating fake meetings to hit quota and/or look like they're overattaining so now people at the company are getting their meetings audited causing unnecessary meetings with upper level mangement. They're also getting rid of a lot of good SDRs right now for missing quota once. Policies at Motive are strict for getting put on a PIP compared to other companies. Somehow they're still firing people who aren't on PIPs and aren't creating fake meetings. Some territories are actually way hotter than others. Accounts are running out, so much that they got rid of the BDR position. AEs have really high turnover and to my knowledge there are only 2-3 AEs that have been promoted from SDR. The company is also slowly taking benefits away - insurance used to be free and lunch used to be catered by good restaurants but now it's some cheap alternative.

1
avatar
Motive Response
1mo
Thank you for taking the time to share your feedback. We’re sorry to hear your experience has not been a positive one. We take concerns around onboarding, enablement, and manager support seriously, particularly for early-career roles like SDRs. At Motive, we provide structured internal resources and enablement tools, including Glean and our Bridge program, designed to support onboarding and help sales team members ramp more effectively. In addition, we aim to ensure performance management processes are applied fairly and consistently, with appropriate feedback and support provided along the way. We appreciate you sharing this perspective.
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All