Les nouveaux regrettent d'être venus, les anciens ne veulent que partir ! - ingénieur avant-vente Splunk Employee Review

1.0
12 July 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Splunk garde une certaine image sur le marché, mais la rémanence s'estompe petit à petit.

Cons

Une boite qui a eu une vision par le passé, mais qui à pris la grosse tête et qui n'a ni la stabilité de ses ambitions, en encore moins les solutions à vendre (les développements partent dans tous les sens, et demain il y aura encore un nouveau produit pas fini à vendre dans un domaine totalement différent). Nivellement par le bas (compétences et salaires) des avant-ventes qui sont plus des vendeurs capables de parler un peu de technique que de vrais avant-ventes, un management sans considération pour les personnes, et sans compétence (sauf celle de faire de la politique politicienne pour se mettre en avant sur le succès des autres, et se défausser quand ils ont merdé) et Splunk pratique la "promotion gros faillot" (et en aucun cas le mérite). L’ambiance en a pris un sacré coup. Le réveil risque d'être brutal !

Explore other reviews about Splunk

5.0
1 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

great company and culture, and product

Cons

not a ton of cons

2.0
18 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Employment Healthcare Dental and vision 401(k) match Employee Stock Purchase Program

Cons

I was an employee of Splunk prior to its acquisition by Cisco. To say the two organizations run things completely different is to say it mildly. Micromanagement, passive aggressiveness, poor communication are just a few of the things that I still remember post acquisition. The level of micromanagement is counter productive and yields far less results than trying to imbed a sense of true ownership. Prior to acquisition Splunkers for the most part were valued as individuals. Post, it is more do it or else mentality. From interactions and observations, direct line managers are heavily stressed causing the ripple effect. Favorites or favoritism are in more abundance post acquisition resulting in increasing 90/10 rule. Promotions are more cutthroat post acquisition as Cisco actually thinks Splunkers coming over were paid too much. So they shuffled folks around, froze headcount that created more work for those still there, and reduced the promotion slots. SEs started jumping off the burning ship so I followed suit and am thankful I did. More and more it seemed like the Splunk folks were just surviving rather than thriving. I was honestly a bit sad when I left because I had so much fun working with Splunk prior to the acquisition. It was energetic, vibrant, and employees had loyalty to the brand. The work was challenging in a good way and people’s individual strengths were leveraged as opposed to having one cookie cutter mold for all.

4
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