Bad Leadership, Bad Business - Anonymous employee ASUG Employee Review

2.0
26 Oct 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If wanting to work for SAP or another SAP-focused company, ASUG is a good place to learn the lay of the land quickly. There are a lot of opportunities for contributing, though it can be exploited while work piles up. My manager was supportive, and I believe managers do want their direct reports to succeed. Benefits are of good quality and affordable. The downtown office is lovely, should you choose to work in person on your own terms. I really, truly loved my team. ASUG is great at hiring amazing people who have a lot to contribute. People quickly bond, and your coworkers can end up being some of your closest friends.

Cons

The business is confusing and constantly changing. A patchwork of revenue sources conflict with each other, leading to competing departments. The resulting workload was unsustainable—for employees and every customer/client served. Goals were impossible to meet due to oversaturation, but there was no sign of letting up. Managers do their best while juggling far too many responsibilities and expectations, while leadership appears to do none of the grunt work. When employees do speak up and suggest solutions (and they have been), leadership doesn’t listen (or fires them). Changes might come about with a DEI council and reorganization, but after experiencing a couple of restructurings and layoffs, it becomes apparent that what leadership promises is simply lip service. Restructurings don’t seem to actually change dynamics, and employees quickly learn how toxic ASUG can often be. Turnover was baffling, even pre-pandemic, with a slew of workers leaving every year. This was unsettling to employees, but leadership attempted to spin turnover as a positive. However, this left employees feeling expendable and not encouraged to stay at the organization, to the detriment of institutional knowledge, ability to serve the customer, and, ultimately, the business. The emails of employee departures or layoffs become at least a weekly occurrence, which is odd in such a small organization. One huge red flag for me was when managers told employees not to discuss amongst themselves an annual raise. This is not healthy and should never have happened. I hope having an individual in HR will help with fixing unethical workplace practices, as well as setting up transparent salary info and pay equity. But seeing as how leadership hired the person, I wouldn’t hold my breath.

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ASUG Response
4y
We appreciate your feed back .  We are very proud of the work we do and are thankful for the great work our employees do every day. Our employee benefits are better than market per the feedback we have been receiving from our recent hires. Thank you for pointing this out. With regard to ASUG’S DEI council, we know what we’re doing is unique and it’s making a positive impact on our culture and employees.  Post pandemic, our turnover rates are in line with what other employers are seeing. We are acting prudently and adjusting our hiring practices accordingly. We don’t share your view that sharing raise and salary information is an indicator of a “healthy” organization. We have welcomed a new HR professional to ASUG who was interviewed by a diverse team across all levels of the organization. We are excited to welcome new faces to ASUG who are excited by our mission.

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Cons

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2.0
23 Mar 2026
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Recommend
CEO approval
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Pros

Lunch and Snacks Nice office space Walkable area

Cons

- This company could've been a Facebook Group. Founded in 1991 and they are still functioning as if it's 1991. Decisions are driven by meetings and personal rapport rather than strategy or data. - Young people get paid less and work more. Often picked for high-output roles, then paid less, their limited professional experience being the excuse while the company leverages their fresher, wider skillset. - Bottom-up ideas? Dead on arrival. Middle managers exist to execute the CEOs ideas, and seldom provide feedback or pushback for the sake of maintaining their position - There's no growth here. High turnover. - The modern digital landscape requires adaptability and vision that simply aren’t reflected in current leadership practices. -

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