Lots of turnover and changes - Sales Development Representative (SDR) Weathermatic Employee Review

3.0
19 Sept 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Team lunches once a week, hybrid setting.

Cons

When I worked there we had constant turn over, sales people leaving, getting fired. I would say an abnormal amount, very few sales people stay over a year. The sales quota was also very confusing and in my opinion not right. I was passing my goals but making far below the OTE because of the way they structured quota, this was a reason for a lot of turnover. The VP of sales is also the owners son and a fresh college graduate…. There are also not many new leads coming in and a high call volume- calling the same people multiple times a week. would not recommend in my opinion.

Explore other reviews about Weathermatic

5.0
6 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work life balance, culture, family atmosphere

Cons

Roles and responsibilities, some communication issues.

2.0
28 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The individual contributors doing the actual work are talented and genuinely committed to their customers. If you're in a ground-level role, you'll find good people around you. I was able to build strong, meaningful customer relationships and take pride in the work I did for them.

Cons

Go-to-market strategy changes constantly — just when a process starts to take shape, it's scrapped and rebuilt from scratch, making it nearly impossible to build anything repeatable or measure success over time. Customers are frequently handed off to new internal owners, which destroys the trust and continuity that took time to build. It's a recurring frustration for clients and employees alike. Advancement has little to do with performance or results. Who you know — and how closely you're connected to certain people in leadership — determines your trajectory far more than the quality of your work. The sales hiring model is a recurring red flag. Rather than developing talent from within, they hire experienced reps from the industry and rely on those individuals' existing contacts to generate new business. Once that personal network is tapped out, the results dry up — and the cycle repeats with the next outside hire. There is no investment in building a sustainable, process-driven sales engine.

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