RiskLens Reviews

3.3

45% would recommend to a friend

(27 total reviews)

Nicola Sanna

55% approve of CEO

43% positive business outlook

RiskLens has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 27 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The RiskLens employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

27 reviews
2.0
10 Dec 2019

Rudderless ship

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Free snacks and drinks - Free health, dental, and vision insurance - Co-founder is a well-respected celebrity within the industry - plus, he's a good person who treats people well even though he's not involved in the business. - If you're not experienced selling into the Fortune 1000, you can learn a lot about Enterprise sales. - Truly a unique product and market. There aren't any real competitors in the space... Yet... - There are pockets of great, brilliant coworkers. - Annual company meetings are fun

Cons

Everything starts at the top: - The CEO claimed to be an analytical person and "leads" a company preaching the importance of making better decisions based on quantitative data, yet all of the business decisions seemed to be made based on his hunches and whatever the latest book he read said. - CEO didn't respect nor trust salespeople. When he first joined the company years ago, he hired "Enterprise Account Executives" by title but used them exclusively to schedule meetings for only him to go sell. Fast forward a couple years and AE's actually do sell but CEO wants to be involved in every deal. The CEO underestimates how savvy buyers are and how they can see right through what an "Executive Bridge" is - which is an overabused sales tactic. - The CEO's attitude towards sales trickled down into every other Department/Executive. Marketing believed the sales team sat on their hands doing nothing all day while waiting for inbound leads. Professional Services thought all salespeople have the intelligence of Neanderthals and treated them as a nuisance. Some interdepartmental relationships were borderline toxic and there are bottlenecks everywhere except Legal. The list goes on. - Sales targets and quotas were unrealistic and dramatically affected morale. Only 10% of reps hit quota over the last 3 years - making OTE laughably unattainable for most. - AT LEAST 20% of every week was wasted on pointless meetings, forecast calls, administrative/clerical tasks, filling out lengthy deal review templates (where you'll get torn to shreds by the CEO). - There was huge disconnect from what Senior Leadership and the board of directors thought was happening in the market vs. what was really happening in the market and on the sales floor. - The staff was told every other month that the new version of the product is being released "soon" but after incomprehensible delays, it's finally about to be released 2 years LATE (not sure if it actually happened - could have been another delay since I left). - Executives kept on telling its employees "this is a unique, once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to create a brand new product category and that everyone will look back fondly on and remember the excitement of the journey. So we need to push and work harder." But only a select lucky few have stock options/equity in the company... The message was both annoying and fell on deaf ears for those who had no incentives to go above and beyond.

1.0
6 Dec 2019

Run away!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

FAIR risk model and innovative product

Cons

Sales responsibility should be to understand the customer needs and to communicate the value of your product to help them achieve their goals. In this company your main job will be to deal with a capricious, lunatic, cold and incompetent CEO. Training is poor and overly academic but if you do not follow the CEO's mindset he will make your short time there miserable. You will find yourself compared to your peers as incompetent and discover that the same treatment is applied to each member of the team, regardless of performance. The company's atmosphere is so bad that it impacts the relationship you are trying to build with customers. CEO always wants to be involved and control everything and has no idea that he personally kills deals. Regarding the relationship between sales, professional services, customer success and marketing, while we should focus on the customers it is more a matter of dealing with sensitive individuals and make sure not to hurt their feelings. The way they asked us to demonstrate the product: presentation and demo are only focused on RiskLens with too much bla bla bla, and no focus on the customer's needs that at some point we loose the customer’s interest.

1.0
30 Jan 2020

Weak Leadership and toxic culture

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Outstanding co-founders with a great vision.

Cons

Unfortunately, I can’t disagree with the overall poor rating and negative reviews that depict RiskLens on this site. It starts at the top with the CEO, who struggles significantly with self-awareness and emotional intelligence. The CEO hires ‘yes men’ to run the sales team that enforce his processes and policies, then immediately uses them as scapegoats when reporting poor revenue to the board. He involves himself in every deal to either play hero or to point the finger elsewhere if the deal doesn’t close. I never once saw him take responsibility for his missteps or blunders. The new CRO is the CEO’s puppet and brings no value to the sales process, and fires people over skype.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 27 Reviews

Glassdoor has 31 RiskLens reviews submitted anonymously by RiskLens employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if RiskLens is right for you.