Sales @ Malwarebytes- An ugly culture that fosters favoritism, nepotism, and politics - Sales bei Malwarebytes: Mitarbeiterbewertung

1,0
21. Aug. 2020
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Geschäftsprognose

Pros

Free snacks were nice. But no current pros since we're not in the office

Kontras

Favoritism, nepotism , and politics run rampant here. A culture can not be fixed if the leadership perpetuates and embodies this culture. The sales executives axed hardworking people who made extremely valuable contributions to the org, but kept questionable people. Leadership always said during meetings that there were no plans to lay-off anyone, come to hear that they had been planning lay-offs for a long time. How can they be trusted this time around when they there's no plans to lay-off any more people? The sales executive team does not accept and listen to criticism. This is very evident in the meetings to discuss quarterly survey results. (Surveys are for us to voice pros/cons, feedback to the sales execs.) Sales team members are very much so a cog in the machine. It should not feel like you're working for a dictatorship, but maybe that's how they want to run the org. If the execs actually took the time to listen to the feedback and made changes based off this feedback, the sales org would benefit a lot. There are too many org/restructure changes to keep up with. It seems like this happens every quarter, multiple times a quarter. It doesn't seem like there is any thought put into the long-term effects that can arise from these changes. Often times, problems will arise, and new changes to address these problems are made shortly after, enabling the cycle of badly thought-out decisions to continue to be made. The leadership during COVID has been unstable. Daily KPI’s and workload has been significantly increased. Obviously no businesses were prepared or have experience dealing with the effects of COVID, but smarter and more empathetic decisions could have/can definitely been made. The product is already one of, if not the most expensive on the market, so it's been even harder to sell during this time. The pay is low compared to the market. I think that the low ratings on Glassdoor, specifically within the sales organization, are really telling to the dysfunction that lives here.

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Reaktion von Malwarebytes
5y
Thank you for your honest feedback. The recent organizational changes were a hard, but a necessary decision to make. These changes will help us better align to our customers and provide more tailored, meaningful relationships. Your concerns and feelings are valid; we are taking all feedback into consideration, and have communicated with employees about some of your concerns in our most recent All Hands meeting. At Malwarebytes, we take pride in our innovative, inclusive culture and welcome feedback on how we can improve. Employees have two formal opportunities to provide anonymous feedback during our annual engagement and manager effectiveness surveys. Key results from these surveys are shared with employees with areas for improvement addressed and set as corporate/management OKRs or personal objectives. Malwarebytes also encourages employees to reach out to their People Business Partner any time they have a question or concern.

Mehr Bewertungen zu Malwarebytes entdecken

5,0
21. Jän. 2026
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CEO-Befürwortung
Geschäftsprognose

Pros

Very supportive managers and a fun, highly collaborative team. The department fosters an environment where ideas are openly shared and opportunities for improvement are discussed constructively without toxicity. Truly the best company I’ve worked for so far.

Kontras

The interview process was somewhat lengthy, and salary discussions were not entirely consistent.

2,0
15. Apr. 2026
Mitarbeiter (anonym)
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CEO-Befürwortung
Geschäftsprognose

Pros

Had some great coworkers during my time at MWB/TD, manager was always very encouraging, and pay was good

Kontras

Outdated technology stack. The platform is built on legacy foundations, and modernization efforts haven't kept pace with the market. Leadership lacks domain depth. Many senior leaders don't have deep cybersecurity or IT backgrounds, which makes it difficult for them to set a clear product vision, read where the market is heading, or chart a credible path to get there. This was supposed to be a cyber company, but outside of the MDR team, that expertise is thin at the top. Good ideas die quietly. I brought forward multiple product ideas that were blocked repeatedly with the rationale that the company is "device-centric, not user-centric." That framing felt disconnected from what the market actually demands. Priorities shift without communication. Strategic direction changed several times during my tenure, but product was rarely looped in ahead of those shifts. I'd learn about new priorities after the fact, with no context on why things changed. Attrition goes unaddressed. There were multiple rounds of quiet layoffs and a steady stream of voluntary departures. Leadership never paused to examine why people were leaving or to share any explanation with the remaining team. The expectation was simply to carry on as if nothing had happened. Bottom line: A challenging culture, unclear leadership direction, and a product that isn't showing up on shortlists where competitors are winning deals. I'd encourage prospective candidates to ask hard questions before joining.

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