This is not a good place to work - Anonymous employee Wonderlic Employee Review

1.0
29 Aug 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Wonderlic management is flexible when you need time off and the office location is convenient. The Wonderlic brand has a lot of history.

Cons

Wonderlic was a better place to work when there was a collaborative culture. Decisions are now made by a small group of male executives in a vacuum and opinions are penalized. It is absolutely a boys club mentality and anyone who says different is an employee encouraged to post a positive review. In sales, if you had a successful year, the following year your job or compensation changed. You were penalized for doing well. There is often unrest and insecurity with no career growth. The new regime, a fourth generation of the family, does not have the experience or humility to be a good leader. They may play up a future trendy office environment but in return you will be misled and unappreciated. Believe the reviews, there is a common theme.

Explore other reviews about Wonderlic

5.0
19 Jul 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Focus on personal growth and making sure you are happy with your position, daily tasks, group collaboration, and over contribution to the company. Very transparent about company goals and concerns and a true open-door policy.

Cons

One-on-ones can be few and far between and there are sometimes customer issues that fall through the cracks while waiting for manager approval

6
avatar
Wonderlic Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience! It's always great to hear that our efforts are making a difference. We're committed to maintaining the positive aspects you've highlighted and always look for ways to do even better.
1.0
13 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The 4 day work week is nice

Cons

Sadly, this once-great organization is floundering while trying to figure out who and what it wants to be. They've lost sight of their GTM strategy in the course of trying to evolve into something they're simply not, and leadership has failed in executing the strategy needed to get them there. Average tenure of a Dir. of Sales is @ 8 months, and the average life cycle of an AE for the last several years is just as dismal (see past reviews). Question everything twice, as you'll be told whatever it takes to get you in the door during recruitment. Don't let data from one busy week or "leads per AE" during a time when the team was at half-capacity fool you...the "overwhelming inbound" they promise doesn't exist. Same goes for "AE's trending for PC". If you're told "XX% of the team is tracking to make quota", clarify if the "team" they're talking about is at full strength or currently at half-capacity and doing the work of 2-3 people each, thereby making them look great on paper at the moment. Request receipts for the last AE that actually made PC and how they rewarded/recognized that achievement. What you should know: New Logo ARR is ~ $9000 Days to close is 31-45 days Conversion from disco to opportunity is @ 60% Close ratios = @ 25% The math: To hit a $1mm quota, you need to close 2.2 deals per week (50 weeks) at $9k each avg. At a 25% close ratio, you need to be giving ~9 demos per week. At a 60% disco-to-opportunity conversion rate, that means you need to also be doing 15 discos per week. (At a $750k quota, the numbers go down to 12 discos and 7 demos needed per week.) Given that, it's important to note that Q2-Q4 2025 discos per week were 1/3 to 1/2 of what was needed for those numbers to work. So, question how they see you getting to the necessary discos per week, because when the numbers = reality and the math doesn't math despite your best efforts, your job is at risk every day. Despite their ill-prepared push to be an "enterprise provider", the product is not enterprise-ready. (No integrations with any major HRIS and a vague, mythical roadmap for developing them. Anyone in SaaS sales knows that enterprise orgs demand your product integrate with the systems they're already using or you're eliminated right away.) So you spend your days trying to persuade tiny organizations to pay enterprise pricing, meaning close ratios suffer and commissions are a fraction of what they tell you is possible.

2
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