The grind never ends and it only gets worse with time - Anonymous employee Snowflake Employee Review

2.0
28 Aug 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

* Reasonably smart and capable coworkers. This means they are fine for their role but they aren't able to stretch well outside of their role to solve a problem they haven't seen before. Basically, they are a specialist with limited capability elsewhere. (this is more like a neutral thing, rather than a pro or con) * Benefits package (USA] * Little micromanagement in the Product Org for my role because I did well.

Cons

* Product managers are not good at administrative managerial activities. This creates a lot of extra work and surprises mid quarter. Even with help from Technical Program Managers (TPMs), it's still hard. Part of the problem is the reliance of too many people with engineering backgrounds. You need to bring some people in with non-eng backgrounds to think a little differently. Of course, this is true for any company that's eng-first. * Despite the company age and being public for many years, everyone is still in a highly reactive mindset, rather than a proactive mindset. Basically, the customer bullies us into implementing functionality before we are ready. So engineering codes a half-baked MVP, and we have to fix it later, which never really comes because everyone else wants the same thing. Tech debt accumulates and then it kills us later. So we scramble and it's a big mess. * Easy to get pigeon-holed into your role. It's hard to make a transfer to a different role, and there's no guarantee that you can make that happen. Basically, you have to go through the whole interview process again, and you need your current manager to advocate for you to the new manager. That's really hard when you are already red-lined with your workload. Even if you do get the other role, your current team has to backfill your role and that takes time. It's hard to replace someone who has a few years of in house knowledge. Knowledge transfer, which no one seems to know how to do, is never complete, and the team you are leaving suffers. Plus, your new team is wondering if you can actually do the new role. You start over when it comes to earning trust. The phrase "set you up for success" is talked a lot but I haven't actually seen it implemented well in the context of role transfers.

Explore other reviews about Snowflake

5.0
16 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Leadership has great initiatives for the organization

Cons

Need for being present in the Office

1.0
24 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The salary was competitive enough although you will never make your bonus because your patch is so poorly configured.

Cons

I observed the worst cronyism in my 40 year career. New sales manager completely overshot the quota and does zero research on the clients in the territory. This forces her account executive to leave. She continued demanding that the solutions engineering team make the revenue happen when all of the clients in the patch “she carved” were defunct and we’re not going to return the investment at that time or possibly even into the future. Did she own up to it? No she did not. She blamed the solutions engineer who was on federally protected leave. Her crony solutions engineering RVP jumped right in without doing any research or homework because he is her friend and he was also brand new to the job. Training wheels still on yet no humility and mowing people down. Unethical, lack of managerial accountability, and blame culture. HR is equally ridiculous as they just jump on the blame train and don’t do any homework even when the employee was on approved leave and had a great prior quarter before leave began. Yes the company approved the leave, and the managers disrespected the leave even when the employee worked through leave at the bedside of their relative. HR makes the person on leave the target instead of backing up and looking at why the quota was set, why these new inexperienced managers are allowed to torment solutions engineering resources. The answer is cronyism.

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