Collaborative and multicultural environment- fast paced: opiniones de empleados con el puesto de Senior Corporate Communications Manager en Veeam Software

5,0
1 may 2026
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Aprobación del CEO
Perspectiva de la empresa

Ventajas

The people here are genuinely great. Everyone’s collaborative and happy to help, which is impressive given the team is spread all over the world. Remote, but it really does feel like a tight-knit group. More multicultural than anywhere I’ve worked before, and the offsites are always somewhere interesting and unexpected. Good work gets noticed too — recognition is real here, not an afterthought. And there’s genuine room to grow your career, which isn’t something you can say about everywhere. It’s an exciting place to be!

Desventajas

Things move quickly, so it’s not for everyone, but I personally love it. They call it the Veeam speed!

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Respuesta de Veeam Software
3w
Thank you for such a warm and thoughtful review. The collaborative, multicultural environment you describe is something we work hard to build and maintain across our global teams, so it's genuinely encouraging to hear it resonates. We're glad career growth and recognition have been part of your experience — and that the pace works for you. We appreciate you sharing this.

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5,0
4 jun 2026
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Aprobación del CEO
Perspectiva de la empresa

Ventajas

Great work life balance. Working with some of the smartest people I've ever worked with.

Desventajas

Growing pains of acquiring more companies.

2,0
3 feb 2026
Empleado anónimo
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Aprobación del CEO
Perspectiva de la empresa

Ventajas

Pay is good as well as benefits.

Desventajas

Poor organizational structure and lack of clarity: Roles, responsibilities, and reporting lines were confusing. This made collaboration and accountability very difficult. Nepotism and favoritism in leadership: Upper management heavily favored hiring and promoting people from their previous companies the "buddy system". Loyalty to personal networks appeared to matter more than competence or performance, which created cliques and made nonconnected employees feel like outsiders. Hypocritical company culture: Leadership frequently talked about "employee matters" values, strong culture, and employee well being, but in practice these were not reflected in actions. Layoffs, heavy workloads after staff reductions, and a focus on looking good on paper undermined any real trust. Frequent layoffs and job insecurity: Multiple rounds of layoffs created constant uncertainty. Remaining employees were expected to absorb significantly more work with fewer resources and little recognition or support. Heavy favoritism toward offshoring and lower cost international employees: Upper management strongly preferred hiring or retaining talent in countries with significantly lower cost of living because their lower salaries made departmental budgets and headcount metrics look better on paper. This resulted in U.S. based employees being disproportionately targeted in layoffs or overlooked for retention/promotion.

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