Sage reviews

3.7

66% would recommend to a friend

(661 total reviews)

Blaise R. Simqu

70% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Sage has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 661 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Sage employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Audiovisual y medios de comunicación industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

661 reviews
3.0
Sep 26, 2016

Super easy internship

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I interned here and my boss was great. Not a micromanager. The work for my job was so easy and apparently I worked faster and better than all the offsite freelancers they hired since than was literally what my boss told me. SO EASY.

Cons

This was over a year ago i understand they changed buildings but idk how it looks. Anyway no one talked AT ALL which I find odd for a company full of younger recent college grads. Silent as a mouse in there! Now I understand loud chatting is distracting and inappropriate for work but is everyone that shy they can't have slight banter with someone they sit by every day? So weird. Like I went to a way better school than Cal Lutheran but everyone is in college (interns) or went to college if they're in an entry level cubicle job since they don't hire people without a degree. It's not hard work or coding that requires 100% silence.

3.0
Sep 20, 2016

A good company

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great working atmosphere and leave policies.

Cons

Very slow career growth and compensation package is low

5.0
Sep 13, 2016

A good way to work.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I fled a large university press to work at SAGE, and have been grateful for my decision and for SAGE ever since. I've never worked for an employer that valued its employees or its mission more (and I've worked for the largest non-profit "mission-based" publishers in the world). The benefits are stellar, the colleagues are wonderful. You hear the word "culture" a lot at SAGE, and you hear a lot from SAGE about how the company shapes and fosters its own culture. In fact, "culture" is so ubiquitous that it induces a fair amount of eye-rolling among middle managers and long-time employees. Well, they have the luxury of cynicism, because most of them have been at SAGE for over 10 years. I still haven't forgotten what it's like to work elsewhere, and for me, SAGE culture is a breath of fresh air. I'm proud to work for a company that actively emphasizes the value of the employee and how our contributions make the world better. Also, we have 1) an engaged and active HR department who 2) aren't temps and 3) actively ENCOURAGE public feedback on Glassdoor so that they can continuously improve.

Cons

Entry-level publishing jobs are very hard on assistants, whether they're in production, editorial, or marketing, and the work is really uneven. Some assistants have more free time than they want; others have an utterly crippling workload. It seems to depend (too much) on who they're supporting. I get that assistant salaries are generally low because they need a lot of training and mentoring, and to be fair, SAGE is great at promoting from within. But assistants and non-exempt employees should probably be afforded more perks than their managers - thinking here of professional development, day retreats, or summer Fridays. Because assistants can and often do feel very burnt out. Also, SAGE's publications are pretty limited. No trade books, no academic monographs, and few professional books mean that the lists are fairly boring and a lot of your output is inaccessible to lay readers. It doesn't just mean that your job is a little less cool than other people in publishing; it means that you will have fewer transferable skills because you "only" work for a textbook/journal publisher. Finally, all the benefits are great, except for the 401k. You don't get any company contributions until you're vested, which takes two years. Company contributions only START after two years (i.e. there's not a growing balance held in escrow until you're vested). And the contributed amount depends on company profitability, so you can't really plan around it. This all makes it kind of painful to save your traditional 10% toward retirement.

Viewing 592 - 594 of 661 Reviews

Glassdoor has 778 Sage reviews submitted anonymously by Sage employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Sage is right for you.