Workday reviews

3.5

59% would recommend to a friend

(4,572 total reviews)
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Aneel Bhusri

60% approve of CEO

41% positive business outlook

Workday has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 4,572 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Workday 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

5K reviews
1.0
Nov 5, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are still some genuinely great people working there. Those who remain, I salute you!

Cons

Once upon a time, Workday was the kind of place that people would take pay and title cuts to join. When someone heard I worked there, the reaction was almost always positive. (Unless they were a recruiter who had to use the ATS.) I remember hearing so much positivity about the culture, and pretty shortly after I joined, I realized it was true. Why? The ephemeral “culture.” We’ve all heard this line about companies, but in the case, it used to be true. Not so anymore. While it’s hard to pinpoint when a culture starts breaking down, here are a few signposts for the cumulative erosion of the “Workday Culture,” and how it became Any Other Big Tech Company. First, they love to slam Oracle and SAP as “dinosaurs” at company meetings. I hate to break it to you, but you’re hiring all your senior management from those two places. To misquote Batman, “you either die a hero, or you live enough to see yourself become Oracle and SAP.” And these people are the hollow, political, shallow operatives that have no original ideas and spout nonsense yet continually get promoted. They know how to protect their territory, but when you crack them open, buzzwords spill out across the floor. That’s all they are. So, Workday is now the dinosaur that it so loves to criticize. Next, I noticed things starting to unravel during COVID. I suppose it exposed what the culture was hanging on, which was mostly in-person interactions, company functions, Pleasanton-centric activities that made it fun to work there. Once those were gone, it started to crack. And the “race to 10 billion” or whatever they called it became the culture, not the actual culture. That was the beginning of the end. And it’s just gone downhill from there. And this was unavoidable, but with the co-founders (both great humans, thanks to them for their leadership) leaving, the end was sealed. The current CEO lacks charisma and will only last a few more years until Workday inevitably ends up part of Salesforce. Now, in the middle of all this, I must say that I have worked with some really great people, and that’s pretty much the only upside of Workday. Those who remain, I salute you. The old guard has quite a few great humans, and I’m thankful to have worked with them. But those who remain must deal with this reality: it’s now the most toxic, political cesspool of a company you’ll ever encounter. Backstabbing, one-upping, desperate power grabs are an everyday experience. It turns you into something you’d never want to be. It pushes you to some dark places. Title and position are the only currency. Career growth is nonexistent. Pay is far below tech standards. Far, far too many middle managers, and if you end up with a bad one who doesn’t advocate for you, and there are many of those, you’re doomed. And if you think that Workday is totally fine, you’re part of the problem. The disrespect shown to the hard work of those of us with the misfortune to work in marketing was another slap in the face. They gave us two CMOs in the last few years who had zero marketing experience. Imagine if any other group did that. They won’t, because they view marketing as easy, like anyone can do it. The current CMO has very little respect internally, and no amount of absurdly cringe Super Bowl commercials and bus tours will hide the fact that she’s devoid of substance and is only building her personal brand on the backs of hard-working marketers. If your idea of a dream company is somewhere you can only advance by making meaningless decks, spouting buzzwords, delegating work to other people, and making plans for planning, then Workday is for you. Otherwise, run far away. Find another generic Big Tech company, rest and vest, live your life, and remember, we’re all more than our jobs. P.S. And everyone’s right — your ATS is garbage. Nobody likes Workday who has to apply for a job using it. P.P.S. And shoutout to anyone in IPE on Workday Blind. Thanks for keeping it spicy.

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Workday Response
1y
We would like to hear more about your experience with Workday and are grateful for your thorough review. We suggest you reach out to our team at employee.relations@workday.com. Our team is eager to assist you.
1.0
Nov 20, 2023

Don’t fall for GPO

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people you work with re incredible. Highly intelligent and capable for the most part.

Cons

Where to start? When I first joined WD it was an incredible place. I felt like it was too real to be true. Unfortunately I was right. After much turmoil, an org restructure, layoffs and then a new organization - we finally settled with terrible middle management. The entire Org is constantly giving feedback especially about management but the feedback falls on deaf ears. Leadership is detrimental, turnover is happening at a high rate and there are rumors of ethics complaints and a potential discrimination class action lawsuit coming together because of bullying, harassment, and discrimination. Morale is incredibly low. Work is incredibly overloaded and if you complain you are pushed out. If you are suspected of giving negative feedback you become a target. Fear drives the org. It’s incredible work we are doing, But the treatment received is toxic and abusive. Leadership continues to pat themselves on the back but it’s ridiculous when the team is running on fumes except those with preferential treatment. I am really happy to be out but feel so bad for everyone else that has been left behind. GPO really has to get rid of the toxic leadership to avoid not only a lawsuits, but the breakdown of the organization.

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Workday Response
2y
We appreciate your feedback and would like to better understand your experience and how we can address the issues that you raised in your review. Please contact us at employee.relations@workday.com and we will be more than happy to further discuss your concerns.
3.0
Apr 5, 2023

Please listen to your workers

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Overall, it's a decent place and people still want Workday to be what is advertised. Generally, there is respect for individuals

Cons

* Understanding how to operate as a diverse workplace is largely lacking. Rather than updating our "game" and making new inclusive ways of working, people who have different backgrounds or approaches are seen as low performers and get pushed out. * Managers talk and gossip about employees entirely too much. It's unfair to the individual especially when they don't hear the feedback directly or given a chance to share their side. *Org leaders don't know what is going on with their teams. They are too busy helping sales or making the senior leaders happy with unhelpful processes to spend time on managing people. * Internal applications to other positions require current manager approval, which makes the process difficult. You are treated differently as soon as they know you're interested in something else. There can be micro-retaliations that are hard to prove, but you can feel it. When we apply outside of the company, no one knows. Why is it acceptable to require we share for internal?

Viewing 181 - 183 of 4,572 Reviews

Glassdoor has 5,139 Workday reviews submitted anonymously by Workday employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Workday is right for you.