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Brightedge Technologies

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Starting point for a career, but not worth sticking around - Sales Development Representative (SDR) Brightedge Technologies Employee Review

2.0
Jan 24, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You'll have fun, young coworkers and make lots of friends, so it feels like a good transition job out of college at first. You'll also receive good training on how to prospect accounts and on how to execute cold calls using different techniques and strategies.

Cons

There are so many things to say, but most of the other real reviews already say them. Favoritism / discriminatory practices are commonplace. Some SDRs will be promoted to Account Executive immediately while others wait around for several months on end even if they've met all of the requirements to become an AE. I understand that budgeting may be a factor here, but stop promising your employees a promotion that you have no intention or capacity to grant. Certain representatives (especially women) would frequently be promised a promotion month after month if they hit certain numbers. They would succeed in hitting those numbers, and still no promotion. Rules of engagement are very selectively applied depending on the representative or the region in question. During my time at BrightEdge, I literally saw representatives log new opportunities in Salesforce on calls where they only got a voicemail message, try to bribe prospects on the phone, and pretend that they had dialed the prospect manually in order to meet quota. This, of course, not only went unpunished, but was rewarded. Meanwhile, other representatives would log an opportunity with full discovery on the prospect and on the account and be cross-questioned every step of the way. The list of prospects you will receive at BrightEdge is an absolute mess. Most of the prospects on your list are either a horrible industry fit for the platform, have already seen the demo multiple times, are actually duplicates of somebody else's account at BrightEdge, or otherwise cannot be prospected due to arbitrary rules about revenue or number of employees. Here's a crazy idea: maybe allow representatives to prospect accounts that are actually a good fit for your product. Why am I sending an opportunity with a $100 million construction company when there's a $20 million e-commerce company with a $100k marketing budget just sitting in my list because it only has 20 employees? If you're lucky, you'll end up with about 200-300 accounts that actually have any chance of purchasing the platform and that you can reach out to per ROE. If you're not adding 10 new contacts a night, you get called out for "not building out your lists enough," but most of the contacts worth adding to Salesforce are already in the platform. So, you either have to waste your time adding random titles to Salesforce, or you have to duplicate contacts already in Salesforce, which means that when you go to call the prospect, you may not be looking at the most recent activity history. In addition to being unfairly applied, the rules of engagement that BrightEdge implements are very contrary to the end goal of closing new business. For example, higher level executives would frequently come onto Sales All Hands and brag about new deals that came through where the prospect only had 30 minutes on the first call or where the prospect was initially contacted in some creative way other than a cold call. The very next day, they would disqualify a representative for setting a 30-minute call (even if the AE had already approved it beforehand) or disqualify a representative for submitting a new opportunity over email. Very unprofessional. Representatives are encouraged to harass and lie to prospects on a regular basis: calling prospects several times back to back, faking phone numbers, calling prospects who've explicitly asked not to be called again, calling prospects on their personal phones and then pretending not to know that it's the prospect's cell phone, etc. etc. Then, if the prospect is still willing to hear you out, you have to give this pitch about how we'll be giving them updated insights on their website when in reality, the first call is the same sample demo that the prospect has probably already seen five times before. Even if the quotas were halfway realistic, there's no sense of achievement in hitting quota because it comes at the expense of your integrity. Quotas are outrageous. And I'm saying this as someone who has hit them. If the list of accounts offered at BrightEdge wasn't so useless for prospecting, maybe the quota could be justified. But as it stands, the only way to hit quota is by creating opportunities that are far from qualified and have no chance of showing up, which, again, is contrary to the idea of business development. This also creates unnecessary tension between the AEs / AE managers and the SDRs / SDR Managers.

Explore other reviews about Brightedge Technologies

5.0
May 18, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Elite product that is industry leading. Cold calling is a difficult job but selling this product makes cold calling easy and people listen on the other end of the line when you say BrightEdge. Training program at BrightEdge fosters success from day 1. At the beginning, you are immersed into the day to day environment of the company all while learning the ins and outs of the industry, hands on with the tool, learning scripts, how to handle objections and cold call at an elite level. So many people hit the ground running here and was fortunate to have BrightEdge as a foundation of my professional and sales career. Some of the things I learned here from day 1 and from my last day at the company I will carry with me for the remainder of my career. Culture is phenomenal, every person in the Chicago office looks out for one another and pushes you to be your best day after day. Everyone gets along and is accepting of one another, I have made lifelong friends at BrightEdge all while hitting my numbers, working hard, and making great money as an entry level sales rep. From 8-5 everyone in the office is locked in and grinding to hit their numbers and helping others do the same. On top of that, it is a fun environment where it makes coming into the office a luxury instead of a chore. I learned an incredible amount from sitting next to my peers and sitting next to leadership and taking advice from them and putting it into action on the salesfloor. Pay for an entry level role is 2nd to none. If you come in everyday with a drive and determination to hit your numbers it is impossible to fail with the resources you and guidance you receive along the way. Hit your numbers and you will make a ton of commission + base pay + overtime. This made it extremely easy to live in the city and live comfortably. Finally, senior leadership has a strong investment in their people and genuinely will do whatever it takes to help you advance your career. Perfect place to start your career, learn a ton about the tech space, make a bunch of money, gain valuable sales experience, and network!

Cons

Young company with growing pains but always open to hearing suggestions on the betterment of the company/office.

1.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will learn the basics and become very close with your coworkers

Cons

This job will make you question your sanity 24/7. Prepare to be constantly manipulated and scrutinized by leadership. The quota is ridiculously unattainable and if you have half of a brain you will realize just how insane the expectations are. The few that do hit quota tend to do so in questionable ways and go on to be promoted while being completely unprepared due to lack of training and outdated practices. The tools you are given are not up to industry standards, forcing you to do a lot of things manually and ultimately decrease your productivity and output. While the product is good, it’s a niche fit and you will be forced to go after prospects at companies that are simply a waste of time for you and the AE, just to hit a made up number. Hours are LONG and there is zero work life balance. Absolutely toxic environment with zero professionalism. You will not see a single example of good OR normal corporate behavior. So much gossip, everything is presented as life or death, and you will be consistently put up against your peers in a very anxiety inducing way.

2
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