Lost of Vision no direction - Sales Engineering EDB Employee Review

3.0
21 Feb 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great community for Postgres product

Cons

Product appears very limited in the world of AI

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EDB Response
1y
Thank you for your review, we truly appreciate your feedback. We are committed to ensuring we hear all views to make EDB a great place to work. We will relay your feedback to senior management and see what can be addressed from the points raised.

Explore other reviews about EDB

5.0
30 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good company good pay good team

Cons

I dont remember any cons

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EDB Response
3mo
Thank you for your response, we truly appreciate your feedback. We value all of our employees and are excited for you to continue your journey with us at EDB!
1.0
30 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people who actually do the work are smart and talented but are constantly dealing with poor decision-making by managers and a lack of clarity and communication about the goals and objectives that are constantly changing.

Cons

I joined EDB excited by the opportunity to help market innovative database technology, but my experience was disappointing due to a persistent lack of leadership and strategic direction. The biggest challenge was leadership. Priorities changed frequently, long-term strategy was unclear, and teams were often left trying to determine what success looked like on their own. Decisions are reactive rather than driven by a cohesive vision, making it difficult to execute meaningful go-to-market initiatives or measure impact. Another concern was the amount of time and resources invested in side projects that lacked a clear business case or measurable customer value. Instead of focusing on initiatives that could drive revenue, customer adoption, or competitive differentiation, the organization often pursued projects without well-defined objectives, accountability, or realistic timelines. This created confusion, diluted focus, and left core priorities under-resourced. Cross-functional alignment also suffered. Product, marketing, and sales were not always operating from the same playbook, resulting in shifting priorities, unclear launch priorities, and unnecessary rework. Employees frequently found themselves adapting to changing direction rather than executing against a stable strategy. There are talented, hardworking people throughout the company, and the technology has real potential. Unfortunately, strong individual contributors can only accomplish so much without consistent leadership, disciplined prioritization, and clear executive and managerial direction.

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