Not a "sales friendly" company - they are users and abusers - BDR Persado Employee Review

1.0
30 Dec 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some very smart people work here and the tech is sexy.

Cons

C-level smug and disrespectful attitude trickles down through the ranks to make the day-to-day truly bombastic for the sales team and outcomes with current clients and prospects. The environment is always in total flux with fire drill directives that switch on a daily bases. All customer facing employees are continually running scared that the CEO will have a bad day and fire them without cause, which creates a CYA attitude and a throw-under-the-bus mentality through out the teams. CEO is a bully and doesn't listen to others, seems he only wants to hear his own voice drone on. In a monthly all hands meeting he called employees who are dissatisfied with getting a promotion, WITHOUT a raise, as "coin-operated" and should not be working for Persado. The head of HR then backs him up by saying "promotions are great way to gain exposure and learn" but I never saw any executive take a cut in their pay to "help the company in these difficult times." As well, they short salespeople on expansion deals by listing them as "renewals" and/or changing comp plan AFTER the deal closes so they don't have to pay commission. The also don't want to pay a salesperson on short-term paid trials, even if the sale is over $100k. They really don't mind having you do all the work, and then push a RIF to be able to play the odds of not paying commissions to sales people and sales leadership. It is really sad.

Explore other reviews about Persado

5.0
17 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Overall it is a very collaborative environment and the team is very welcoming to new hires. The teams have deep knowledge of the platform and industry and a general passion for helping solution for customers.

Cons

A lot to learn quickly, but everyone is quite helpful.

1.0
11 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Working remotely, okay offices, nice people.

Cons

If you stay at Persado long enough, you eventually realize the culture is deeply cliquey. Advancement often feels less tied to performance and more tied to proximity. Become your manager’s favorite, make Persado your entire personality, and maybe you’ll move up. More often than not, promotions happen because someone quit or got pushed out, not because the company is meaningfully investing in growth. Cross-functional collaboration is easily the worst I’ve experienced in my career. Teams operate in silos, communication is fragmented, and accountability disappears the moment priorities shift. To be fair, middle management isn’t always the problem. A lot of them are clearly overwhelmed themselves. But upper leadership seems entirely consumed by financial optics and scrambling to keep pace with the constantly shifting AI landscape. The company continues to become increasingly lean under the guise of being “agile.” At a certain point, “agility” just becomes corporate code for chronic understaffing. Burnout is not an exception here. It is the operating model. And to be completely transparent, Persado is not a place for people looking for balance, mentorship, or sustainability. The expectations are relentless, the support is minimal, and the pressure compounds over time. The company today is significantly leaner than it was two years ago, which should concern anyone paying attention. Healthy companies scale intelligently. Struggling companies continuously reduce headcount while reframing it as efficiency. They recently eliminated the entire QA team, presumably to offload testing responsibilities onto engineers and AI tooling. What was especially insulting was leadership insisting this had nothing to do with cost-cutting. No one believed that. And the unwillingness to say the quiet part out loud perfectly captures the culture at Persado. People are viewed as expendable resources, not long-term investments. The unspoken philosophy is essentially this: absorb more work, tolerate increasing pressure, and if you eventually crack under it, someone else will replace you. There’s also an unhealthy level of micromanagement embedded into parts of the culture. Some people at this company genuinely need an identity outside of work. When your primary contribution becomes monitoring Slack statuses, over-policing process, and manufacturing urgency, you are no longer improving performance. You are contributing to toxicity. And yes, I understand a lot of this pressure rolls downhill from leadership. But at some point, managers have to stop normalizing burnout simply because executives do. I’ve seen multiple employees routinely exhausted, emotionally drained, and in some cases openly crying from stress. That is not normal, no matter how many startups try to glamorize it. If you’re considering applying here, look beyond the branding. On paper, Persado looks exciting: AI, enterprise clients, fast-paced growth. But internally, it often feels unstable, reactive, and deeply exhausting. Many of the glowing reviews come from leadership, HR, or long-tenured employees who either benefited from the old culture or actively perpetuate the current one. The company may still have talented people. But talent alone does not prevent a ship from sinking.

8
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