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Brightedge Technologies

Engaged Employer

Brightedge Technologies reviews

2.7

35% would recommend to a friend

(556 total reviews)
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Jim Yu

47% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

Brightedge Technologies has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 556 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Brightedge Technologies employee rating is 30% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

556 reviews
1.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You’ll have one genuinely honest and supportive conversation there…. during your exit interview.

Cons

They have truly mastered the art of making talented people feel like they’re never doing enough. Every day is another race to hit unrealistic metrics while leadership delivers motivational speeches that somehow make morale even worse. They make this place seem like the best place to work on earth especially when candidates come in for interviews, when in reality it’s all stress and depression behind closed doors. You’re told you’re valued, but it quickly becomes obvious your worth is tied almost exclusively to whatever number appears next to your name that week on a brag slide show, during a weekly meeting where the same “top perfomers” speak about the same recycled advice every single week that nobody listens to because it’s not helpful at all. You will also walk away with zero consultative sales skills as an sdr because this job isnt even real sales it’s just harassing people to get them to answer the phone and straight up lying to them to hit an insanely high quota. There literally aren’t even enough business days in the month to hit goal without cheating it’s honestly diabolical. It’s the name type of mess on the AE side but worse, they push you to finish your sdr career as soon as possible so you can be promoted into a role with even more depression and less work life balance it’s honestly hilarious. The suspiciously enthusiastic five-star reviews talking about the “amazing culture.” and “growth opportunity” really isn’t fooling anybody especially with having a turnover rate that high. If you are in the interview process or received an offer and are debating on whether to go there, just don’t. That first post grad job high will wear off in like 2 weeks max and by month 3 you will have lost your will to live and by then you’ll already be a shell of a human and not even realize it.

2.0
Feb 8, 2026

Avoid

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Good place to work if you don't know what you're doing, because neither does leadership. -Decent pay

Cons

-Toxic leadership that regularly chastises, yells, and argues every detail -Minimum benefits in terms of PTO, parental leave, etc. -Will try to neg you on raises, only gives a 1% increase to 99% of team members each year (if that).

1.0
Jan 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will leave with extremely strong cold‑calling skills that make you stand out at your next company. Any role you take afterward can feel far better by comparison, with more realistic targets and a healthier sales environment. Overtime pay allows early career professionals to live and work in major cities like Chicago and New York City, but this was due to a legal battle prior to my start with BrightEdge, signaling a lack of actual care for employees and a larger focus on legality. Despite everything, you may form some of your closest friendships there, bonded by going through the difficult experience together

Cons

The company culture is defined by micromanagement and dysfunctional leadership, where managers push extreme work hours, dismiss underperformance/ ehtical boundaries as being “soft,” and sometimes react with physical outbursts like ripping pillows or kicking chairs with no consequences for their actions. Promotion timelines are effectively illusory, advancement is delayed even when you consistently hit 100% of the stated performance metrics. This creates the sense that the promotion path is more of a retention tactic than a genuine, achievable career progression plan The environment resembles an extension of college fraternity culture, which may appeal to those who never want to leave that kind of scene but can feel unprofessional and immature to others. SDRs are pushed to chase superficial activity metrics instead of real business outcomes, spamming marketers and misrepresenting interest to inflate demo counts that make SDR leadership look good rather than driving revenue, supporting Account Executives, or building genuine sales skills. This sets up unrealistic expectations for the Account Executive role, where most time is spent on weak, disinterested leads who were dragged through the funnel, while SDR leadership continues to pressure AEs to “qualify” deals that clearly have no viable path forward. Management will focus on their one "golden boy" and not give support to newer members. This results in 1 person pulling the weight of the entire team, making everyone else feel subpar, yet focus is never on said manager who is failing to support SDRs (literally cold calling). The workplace is characterized by an unkempt office and a toxic drinking culture that blurs professional boundaries and contributes to an overall unhealthy atmosphere. There is a troubling presence of racially charged language in both day‑to‑day interactions and official, company‑sponsored communication channels, raising serious concerns about inclusivity and respect. Certain policies and expectations cross legal / ethical lines, such as denying sick days and coercing employees into obligations that appear to violate basic labor protections (should not resort to legal action to be treated appropriately as they did with overtime pay in the past) The culture also reflects extreme favoritism, where low‑performing female reps are frequently put on performance improvement plans, while male counterparts in similar positions are shifted into other areas of the business or even given management roles instead. Promotion timelines for men are noticeably faster with less requirements, reinforcing a perception of gender bias in advancement opportunities

Viewing 208 - 210 of 556 Reviews

Glassdoor has 567 Brightedge Technologies reviews submitted anonymously by Brightedge Technologies employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Brightedge Technologies is right for you.