Handshake reviews

3.1

41% would recommend to a friend

(289 total reviews)

Garrett Lord

41% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

Handshake has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 289 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Handshake employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Education industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

289 reviews
2.0
Feb 8, 2023

Amazing Mission, Atrocious Execution

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Generally smart and passionate co-workers who are interested in making an impact Mission-driven organization that truly want to make an impact to democratize opportunity for everyone

Cons

Where do I begin... Leadership is extremely disorganized and amateurish. CFO joined and left within a year right as the market took a sharp turn for the worse, and now there is no adult in the room to properly manage finances. Not a single person on the exec team has any clue on how to navigate through a downturn. Enterprise sales, probably the most important team in a SaaS organization, consistently underperforms with no improvement plan. Hired a seasoned Enterprise sales exec with 20+ years of experience, only to let him go after 6 weeks. Like cmon, you're hiring company leadership, not an entry-level SDR who just graduated. Quota attainment is absolute trash, with 1 outta 4 or 5 AEs hitting the 70-80% expected attainment. Sure, sales is a revolving door, but the amount of turnover not only on the rep level, but also on the manager level, is just unprecedented. I've worked at a few tech companies now and none comes as close to the turnover that Handshake has seen. Mediocre product with limited modules have resulted in expansion softness. This combined with underperformance from the sales team explains why Handshake has consistently missed target, and only grew at a fraction of what they told the board that they would in FY22. Growth for FY23 has been reduced as well. Given the market is reverting to normalized valuation levels, Handshake's current valuation is probably $1.5bn at best, and it will take at least to the end of FY24 to get back to the $3.5bn valuation. Employee's equity is taking a huge bath and has no way of cashing out. And of course, there is the shady layoffs quietly re-branded as "performance related separations." Most folks who got let go had no clue they were underperforming, and didn't even get a review or a PIP conversation. Instead of doing a round a layoffs like any normal tech firm, Handshake decided to save its image and simply screw its employees over. One of the most despicable things to do imo. Not only that, after the layoffs happened, the CEO announced during all hands that the company is pivoting to a "high performance culture," basically gaslighting the employees and blaming them for underperforming. Would've been a great company, but now I'd recommend people to avoid at all costs. You join startups with the hope that your equity will triple and quadruple in a few years; this simply will not happen with Handshake.

1.0
Oct 20, 2023

Decent product, Unhealthy work environment

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

My colleagues at Handshake were hard-working and incredibly competent. It was inspiring to be part of a team where people were dedicated and skilled at what they did.

Cons

Ever-Shifting Priorities: The company's priorities were in constant flux, making it impossible to focus or plan effectively. Ineffective Communication: Communication was a mess, with unclear expectations and a lack of transparency. Disorganized Leadership: Leadership lacked direction and organization. Lack of Appreciation for Hardworking Employees: Hardworking employees were consistently overlooked, causing burnout and low morale. Misguided "Performance-Driven" Culture: The company's push for a "performance-driven" culture only encouraged more work from already overburdened teams, neglecting the need for proper support and resources. This also led to poor work-life balance for some. My colleagues and I consistently tried communicating these issues with leadership, but were never met with solutions. I cannot recommend this company to anyone seeking a healthy work environment.

1.0
Aug 26, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The competition is not real. They help companies check a box with the smallest investment possible to do so, it's not a sustainable model and everyone in the industry knows that. - If you get lucky with the accounts you get, you can make a lot of money, BUT I haven't seen anyone make a lot of money without destroying their mental health or work/life balance. I have seen most people chasing the W2 promised in the interview, and never get there.

Cons

- 25% of the sales team is hitting its number, ask for proof during interview. - the company has missed every revenue target post pandemic when Handshake stopped being a "must have." Ask for proof during interview. - we oversold most customers, and severely outsold product innovation to where there is no recovery in sight - the $100M in revenue mark was due to the pandemic, not tied to value driven for customers - Handshake's golden team, Strat, hasn't hit a revenue target since the pandemic, only 1 of 8 non-Fed reps hit last year - GTM leadership continues to make the wrong decisions and costing the company millions in revenue and reps their promised W2 numbers - GTM leaders provide 0 value for rep growth, moving deals forward, etc. They are just admins. They will oversell you during the interview process, so do your research, and ask the very tough questions/ask for proof.

Viewing 19 - 21 of 289 Reviews

Glassdoor has 459 Handshake reviews submitted anonymously by Handshake employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Handshake is right for you.