Docusign reviews

3.6

61% would recommend to a friend

(3,633 total reviews)
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Allan Thygesen

60% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

Docusign has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 3,633 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Docusign employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
5.0
Jun 11, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

DocuSign is a company with a self-improvement culture. We're always asking, how can we take things to the next level. For example, in the last couple years, we've advanced from being a primarily one-product company to a cloud suite of offerings. Engineering is focused on learning from every incident, making sure it doesn't happen again, and actively educating on best practices. We're looking for people who care about our customers and care about the people they work with and want to make things better. 1. The people. We hire people who are smart, good communicators, skilled, experienced and have good strong fits for their positions; and also friendly, collaborative and pleasant. 2. The product. DocuSign builds its own infrastructure to the standards of Banks and Governments. Our Document Transaction Management service is extremely flexible and customizable. The breadth of our integrations provides a rich pipeline of capabilities. DocuSign's technology is so visionary that it becomes a system of systems, able to integrate across multiple dimensions. 3. The leadership. Dan Springer and his leadership team bring talent and experience, but also a best-in-class mindset that shows in our strategy and initiatives. Last year's acquisition of SpringCM was brilliant and is such a strong fit for our vision. DocuSign's leadership really gets it. At every All Hands we talk about how to make DocuSign the place where you do the work of your life.

Cons

They run out of Diet Coke's on my floor all the time. One challenge in Engineering is that we don't have enough Senior Directors, that is upper-middle hands-on technical leadership. We have solid VP's, and we have solid Managers and Directors, but we need more of those strong organizational leaders who can lead mid to large size teams though technical transitions. It's hard to find and hire truely excellent upper-middle leaders because that role is so competitive. I'd say that our technology stack is not as agile as we'd like to modernize and decouple and adopt new technologies and platforms. Our ultrahigh reliability bar has a downside in that any change to the system must go through so many checks and balances that code velocity is a little disappointing. The flip side of playing in so many regulated markets is that the compliance demands make change difficult. Basically, even stronger leadership through technical evolution of a 7-10 year old code base will enable us leverage greater technical innovation. Stock price can be volatile but we're in it to win it and not focused on the short term.

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Docusign Response
7y
Thank you so much for sharing your detailed thoughts on what it is like to work at DocuSign. And thank you for the generous advice and feedback.
2.0
Mar 10, 2019

Value's Lacking

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Hungry and talented employees - Good people, for the most part - Promotion opportunities (when actually given to people who earned it)

Cons

- Leadership is out for themselves and their priorities, upper leadership brought in pre ipo (for their own agendas/or friends agendas) - Many leaders do not advocate for their teams - Lack of transparency - Internal surveys that "encourage" transparency, which is then held against departments with low scores/bad feedback - Fear tactics encourage employees not to speak up - Compensation is low across most functions

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Docusign Response
7y
Thank you for sharing your point of view. We have forwarded your feedback to our Chief People Officer, Joan Burke, and encourage you to reach out to her directly if you feel comfortable.
3.0
Jul 21, 2017

Very unbalanced workload - most underpaid, some overworked

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work-life balance is only existent if you happen to land on the right team. Colleagues are generally very supportive of each other (management is not). Everyone I see works hard - there are no slackers here. Snacks are pretty good. 20 days of vacation time is not bad either.

Cons

Sales operations and finance in San Francisco are understaffed and overworked. Management hears complaints, makes promises to change, but does not actually act. There is no room for career advancement and there is no time for professional development. There are too many managers for a company this size. Sometimes managers do not even have direct reports. Management rarely promotes from within. They would rather hire someone from the outside with more experience than develop their existing employees. A path to promotion is extremely unclear- criteria seems to be based on tenure and office politics rather than merit. Accounting does not believe in promotions and raises outside of the annual focal cycle, so if you may have to wait almost 2 years to be considered for promotion if you time it wrong. This policy is grossly unfair since other departments do not enforce this rule and many people in other departments get promoted outside of the annual focal. DocuSign claims to pay at the 50th percentile, but it's low for San Francisco. Since salary is so low, everyone is counting on a successful IPO to make it worth it to stay.

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Docusign Response
8y
Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
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