SAS reviews

4.0

79% would recommend to a friend

(3,098 total reviews)
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Jim Goodnight

83% approve of CEO

62% positive business outlook

SAS has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 3,098 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The SAS employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
1.0
Aug 25, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The breadth of SAS's analytic capabilities, the size of the existing customer base and the Data for Good initiatives that assist the community.

Cons

In an advanced analytics market that analysts claim is growing by more than 30% YOY, SAS is falling behind with revenue growth of 1.25% in 2017, 0.93% in 2018. That’s likely to go negative in 2019 after the worst half year in SAS’s history. Internally, the company feels like it’s dying. Monopolies rarely foresee the end of their dominance and often assist in their own demise by burning customer bridges over the years. SAS is no different. Many C Level IT and Data Executives were once mid-level managers who experienced SAS’s vendor lock-in tactics and mediocre support. These individuals are now making sure they don’t get fooled again with concerted efforts to minimise the use of SAS’s proprietary language and tools within their organisations. In Australia this can be seen with the significant drop in the number of “Beacon Accounts” (SAS’s largest customers) in Banking and Utilities, as well as significant licensing losses in government and telecommunications over the past year. The differentiators that once made SAS the analytics company of choice have been whittled away by competitors and the open source community. Delays in the release of the long overdue SAS platform replacement called Viya provided the time competitors needed to close the capability gap. Viya is here now and it’s not that it’s bad – it’s just that after 4+ years in development, Viya still doesn’t have all the functionality of “old SAS” and frequently what was developed on “old SAS” (e.g. reports, dashboards and model projects) is not backwardly compatible. Not to mention, Viya’s hardware footprint is massive, which pushes SAS’s total cost of ownership beyond that of competitors. To stay current on SAS, customers are forced to rip and replace SAS for SAS and this has opened the door to more cost-effective and customer-friendly alternatives such as Python, R, Knime, Spark, Databricks, Tableau, Microsoft… The list goes on. Furthermore, SAS’s solutions in Risk, Fraud and Compliance have been frozen in time waiting on Viya with few, if any, upgrades for a number of years. When they eventually are made available on Viya, customers should expect to rip and replace their existing SAS solution making competitive solutions based open standards and not proprietary tools even more attractive. Monopolies are generally cash rich and thus happy places, but often lack quality management. The move for SAS into a non-monopolistic position can not only be seen in the fall in revenue growth but in employee satisfaction as well. SAS’s rankings in Fortune’s ‘100 Best Companies to Work For’ list has plummeted from 4th to 8th to 15th to 37th to 60th between 2015 and 2019. A simple forecast puts SAS out of the top 100 Great Places to work by 2021. In Australia, rumours abound about employees making complaints to HR regarding bullying and harassment by managers and directors where there was no action taken by the company and the employee left shortly after making their complaint. Good employees go first and at SAS there is an exodus, leaving behind those hanging on and hoping retirement comes before SAS’s doors close.

2.0
Jun 27, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits; nice campus. Great place to go and just blend in; great if you like doing the bare minimum.

Cons

Unethical HR practices. Inconsistently and subjectively applied policies. Leadership has no idea how bad things really are due to middle management not holding teams accountable and sharing information upwards.

1.0
Aug 14, 2015

SSO department is ridiculously bad!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company's employee friendly policies are a plus. A lot of decent policies like day care, adoption assistance and health club reimbursement though are overshadowed by the the incompetence and arrogance of the SSO department's management.

Cons

More than deriding a company or it's people this review is aimed towards being feedback for the company and also a message for Java developers joining the SSO department in SAS R&D, Pune. The management in SSO works hand in hand and there are no skip level meetings where you can provide feedback or expect improvement. Technically the department is in the 90's! There existed no build files or mechanism for projects on production when I joined! And that is just the tip of the iceberg! No code reviews are done and the usual attitude is just to get the job done via the shortest route possible. There are absolutely no technical leaders in SSO and code quality as a result is dismal. SAS has certain standards when it comes to code, build, libraries, etc. None of these are followed in the SSO department for some reason. Decisions are ad hoc and spontaneous often portraying the management's juvenile and arrogant ways. Politics is prolific! Deserving people beg for promotions and are cited ridiculous reasons for not getting or delaying them. Rumors are floated around about people who want to leave so that the management can save their behinds. I was lied to about promotions shamelessly. I hope the top management looks into SSO and realizes these issues before more employees suffer.

Viewing 28 - 30 of 3,098 Reviews

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