High Churn; You're a Cog - Senior Analytics Manager ZoomInfo Employee Review

3.0
Jun 15, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The data is plentiful, clean, and accessible. It makes doing my job easy, and at times enjoyable. Many of the systems and infrastructure in place are truly best in class. Anyone in analytics knows the value of these fundamentals to your responsibilities and career growth. My ability to work in this data environment has definitely resulted in fast skill growth due to the ability to spend more time on the important stuff rather than data acquisition and cleaning. A great place to work to hone your skills. Get in, do 2 years, and get out.

Cons

The culture moved so fast. Too fast. If an idea takes more than 1 day to execute and show results, it won't get support. Some great ideas are also big ideas, which may take time. Unless you're in senior management, you won't be heard and won't get support for these projects. Ideas and direction are very top-down. I really feel like a cog in the machine. The work culture is also insane. You should plan to work 12-hour days at least 3x per week if you want to get promoted to director or above. They preach work-life balance, but their actions around promotions and layoffs speak differently. If you don't give it all, and then some, you won't succeed.

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ZoomInfo Response
3y
Thanks for leaving a review. We pride ourselves on our thriving fast-paced culture and we absolutely want to hear from our employees who are responsible for making our success happen. We win because we innovate quickly and never slow down yet every day we strive to be 1% better. I encourage you to reach out your HR Business Partner to talk through these concerns. Thank you again for your feedback (and for your hard work at ZI!)

Explore other reviews about ZoomInfo

5.0
Jul 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The caliber of people here, from engineering to sales to operations. There's a collaborative, "figure it out together" culture rather than territorial silos. - Leadership is generally open to internal mobility and stretch assignments if you raise your hand. I've seen colleagues move across departments and take on bigger scope when they show initiative. - Solid and affordable health benefits compared to anywhere else I have worked, unlimited PTO, and perks that reflect a company that cares about employee wellbeing. - Things move fast here, which means you get exposure to a lot and can see the direct impact of your work relatively quickly compared to larger, more bureaucratic companies.

Cons

Like any growing company, it's not without its challenges. The pace can be intense, and priorities sometimes shift quickly.

1.0
Jul 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people. My peers in marketing are experienced, fun, and whip-smart. Colleagues, even those long gone, have continued to be supportive of one another in ways I've not seen at other companies. The networking is amazing. Although it may also be trauma bonding.

Cons

Marketing is always the scapegoat here and will always get hit hard when there are layoffs. In early summer 2025 they laid off nearly the entire product marketing team - from 26 people to 2- and "replaced" them with AI. Morale never recovered, the messaging has never been clearly communicated since then, and the worst part is CEO Henry Schuck went on a podcast to brag about it. Talk about out of touch. In the entire time I worked there, marketing leadership was sorely lacking. There has never been clear direction. This is still a problem with the new CMO, who is both heavily involved at a micro level and yet opaque about important things the whole department should know. And now the constant trimmings... Er, layoffs... no -- "exits" -- have gotten even more extreme. We're just wholesale replacing standard, strategic marketing positions and even teams with agencies. Which is quite a look for a billion dollar company. It might be worth it to work here for 6 months or a year if you can manage for the experience and connections, but the constant strategic switch-ups and looming inevitability of layoffs will wear you down. And soon you'll be looking for an escape route so you can say "you can't lay me off, I quit."

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