Not perfect but not bad - somewhere in between - Sales Executive CrowdStrike Employee Review

4.0
Nov 4, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- industry leader so the product typically sells itself - the ESPP is a solid employee retention tool, especially for CrowdStrike vets who joined pre-IPO - smart management and Engineers who understand our motto “one team, one fight” - you don’t have to recreate the wheel during evaluations. Tons of internal resources to help you get to the next step and great subject matter experts who can provide quick pointers. - easy to do this job from home - if you need help or have a question, there is almost always someone who will point you in the right direction and walk you through solving a technical concern. - strong value proposition; easy to sell something that is a “need to have” vs. a “nice to have.” - Base is average but commission and accelerators plus RSUs are strong. Acceptable OTE, and very reasonable to meet or exceed quota.

Cons

- Internally, too much emphasis on various political agendas that have nothing to do with cybersecurity, which cater to the loudest voices in the room, yet are unnecessary and unwelcome for many at the company. The intent is good but the messaging is not always ideal or wanted. - for a company that is hyper focused on DEI, it seems strange how few women there are in sales roles. It appears that some CrowdStrike locations have an almost entirely male driven sales org. I can imagine it would be intimidating to join if your team is all dudes. - lots of new releases and modules/acquisitions which in theory are great since we can now sell to a wider range of personas, but it causes sales friction because of minimal resources across these teams, so sales conversations beyond the endpoint have a tendency to stall. This will change, but we don’t know when or how. - they say this job is not territory dependent but it very much is. TOLA, the Northeast, and Silicon Valley understand and appreciate CrowdStrike’s value and will always find the budget for CrowdStrike. Others are still stuck in a legacy mindset so it’s a harder and different sell. - no more open vacation. Some sales reps in certain roles now have limited PTO for compliance purposes. They tried to sugarcoat this is a positive thing because companies that offer open PTO have employees who don’t actually use it, however this is not the case for many reps here. This change caused some initial resentment because it felt like some had capped vacations and others didn’t due to exempt vs. non-exempt status. - as we rapidly grow, the red tape is growing too. There are more internal barriers to get simple requests approved and more people who need visibility within every step of a sale.

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CrowdStrike Response
4y
Thank you for your thoughtful feedback—you're clearly very invested in helping make CrowdStrike the best workplace it can be. It's great to hear you stand behind our product, leaders, culture and mission. However, we're disheartened by some of your comments around workplace diversity, PTO and support for the Sales teams. Please know we are continually striving to create a supportive, inclusive and equitable workplace across departments and at all levels of the company. If you'd like to discuss your specific feedback further, we encourage you to reach out to HR or Lindsey N. in Employee Experience.

Explore other reviews about CrowdStrike

5.0
Jun 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Supportive and encouraging work environment with great people. Growth opportunities and career advancement. Fun and collaborative work culture.

Cons

Pay could be higher, but potential for over achieving quota.

3.0
May 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote work culture Is excellent, innovative tech, company's growth and opportunities to protect clients. Felt fortunate to have worked for this organization that has a strong growth tragectoruy and protects clients.

Cons

Manager/Director level: Poor communication from team manager/director, with little to no direction and the lack of team morale. Team members were on their own after training and most meetings could've been an email. The presence of the director was the equivalent of a virtual bulletin board. No ownership was taken from management to lead or guide the team and no sense of loyalty exists between management and team members. Good talent was squandered due to complacency and lack of direction. Company: Con for the company is the unfortunate lay offs that happened after leaving the company. It's a shame they laid off veterans from my former team. The writing on the wall was apparent, from outsourced new hires to the non-competitive compensation for newer hires. The company went from a fun and competitive start up to a disconnected company trying to emulate tech industry trends and "balances the budget" AKA lay offs, to look good to share holders. For a company that nets huge profits year after year, layoffs shouldn't be part of the reality.

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