Horrible Experience as a woman in tech - Senior Software Engineer Direct Supply Employee Review

1.0
24 May 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good culture - as long as you don't rock the boat

Cons

A male coworker sent me a flirtatious email. Later, he gave me constructive 'feedback' in the form of yelling and hurling insults. I went to HR, sharing the email. But because this male coworker said he didn't mean it "that way", they decided it wasn't inappropriate at all, and made me out to be the problem. My leader also yelled at and insulted me when I asked for help with a task I was struggling with. HR blamed me. They refused to move me somewhere else where I didn't have to work with people who mistreat me, and instead offered me resources to leave the company. Way to make a "partner" feel valued, guys.

Explore other reviews about Direct Supply

5.0
27 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Profit Sharing, networking options, 401k match, work from home options

Cons

There are some cliques which makes it hard to fit in

1.0
3 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The entry level employees are genuinely some of the nicest and most collaborative people you will meet. The office culture at the peer level is strong and supportive. The hybrid schedule provides flexibility and the office is dog friendly which makes the day to day environment more enjoyable.

Cons

From a sales perspective there was a clear gap between leadership expectations and what was actually realistic in practice. Year over year quota increases often felt disconnected from actual market conditions and deal flow. Even after strong performance, targets were raised significantly which made consistency difficult over time. The compensation structure also changed in a way that reduced earning potential while expectations continued to increase. It created a situation where reps were being asked to do more without a meaningful upside, which made it harder to stay motivated over time. The company positioned itself heavily around being an early adopter in AI and tried to push that narrative internally and externally, but in practice it felt more like chasing a trend than solving real business problems. A lot of effort went into building an internal AI tool, but it was not well aligned with what sales teams or customers actually needed and it struggled to create real day to day value in deals. Part of the issue was that the AI initiative was largely built by a team that did not have strong day to day sales or business context. It felt like there was a gap between the people building the tool and the people actually using it in live customer conversations. For a long period there was also very little direct shadowing or input from frontline roles, and real workflow feedback did not seem to be incorporated until well over a year into the rollout. At times it felt like leadership was trying to compare early AI adoption to early internet adoption, but the reality was much more complex given how fast the space was evolving and how competitive it already was. A lot of focus went into messaging and positioning, but less into ensuring the tools actually improved sales execution or solved clear problems in the field. Communication from leadership to employees was often unclear which led to shifting priorities and misalignment on what success actually looked like. Overall the people on the ground were strong and easy to work with, but execution, expectations, compensation structure, and the AI strategy made it a challenging environment to consistently succeed in sales.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All