Difficult times - Enterprise Technical Advisor One Identity Employee Review

2.0
27 July 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I re-joined Quest after leaving Binary Tree in 2018, I was so excited and felt redeemed and came to Quest really positive. -Work from home (and trusted too) -Perks are "ok" but by all accounts they vary by country a lot. -Incredibly technical product -Some great people -One Identity is beginning to position itself to exit Quest and be it's own entity but it has a tough road ahead with staffing issues and you have to be ready to "fight". Could be good in the long term but there's a lot of pain to go through right now. -Progression is quick under the present circumstances

Cons

Sadly me rejoining wasn't to be, circumstances were vastly different... One Identity bore the brunt of the cutbacks from San Francisco partners and some of its best people left or were made redundant, at a time they were reasonably lean in comparison to Quest itself - or as I was informed. It's left a semi-functional team that is quite disaffected, burnt out and threatened by the future. Clearlake Capital are investing and hiring is going on but you can't change the past 2 years for some members of staff and how its affected them. It makes for a challenging work place as a new hire. You can't rely on people being open or sharing information and as a ex colleague of mine succinctly put it "there is no favours to be given" by existing team members. I was told at one point that they were simply being waiting to be made redundant (as a team). My hiring manager seemed to take issue that I came from an agency and so tried to place extra responsibilities on me and made reference that "you cost more than other people" (even though I was on the same salary as my peers). Never had that said to me before, in 17 years of working in IT, and I was meant to be a permanent member of staff. I was told "constructively" that "you are not fresh, I need fresh people" several times when I said I was struggling. Rather than being encouraged, after a conversation, I had my probation cut short and was sacked immediately with my notice period owing. I felt my manager was avoiding the team politics and in effect, throwing us new employees under the bus at times, even told me to not pay attention to senior management and no one could predict "a good future" ahead at One Identity. My manager shared with us about a complaint being made by one of our peers that started the same day and seemingly wanted us to treat them differently. Just weird, I had hoped to join under better circumstances and even being given a chance to transfer to another team or department under Quest but it was cut very short and I wasn't given the chance to try and do so, for some reason.

Explore other reviews about One Identity

5.0
16 Sept 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great team structure and people Employees buy in to leadership’s vision Remote work available

Cons

Fast-paced working environment (not necessarily a con, but have to stay on your feet)

1.0
20 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The ability to work remotely.

Cons

Since the arrival of the new CEO, Praerit Garg, in September, the company culture has shifted to a highly toxic environment. The CEO operates with a high‑control, top‑down leadership style characterized by micromanagement, limited trust in others, and a belief that his perspective is the default “correct” one. Rather than leveraging the expertise of his executives, he tends to dictate decisions, override input, and centralize authority, often inserting himself into operational details that should be delegated. His approach signals a conviction that he alone has the full picture, which creates a dynamic where dissent is discouraged and alignment is achieved through compliance rather than collaboration. His style can come across as dismissive which reduces the willingness of leaders to surface risks or alternative viewpoints. As a result, many of the most skilled and experienced executives have left the company over the past 6 months. This year, for the first time since I have worked at the company, they will not be paying employees an annual bonus. For many employees, the bonus can represent as much as 15-30% of their compensation. Strong performers across areas were told this month that they would not even receive merit increases, affecting the already low morale in the organization. Many have begun their job search seeking an organization where they can work with an empowering management that values their expertise, invests in their career growth, respects diverse ideas, and creates a positive work environment.

4
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