Seasoned, career-driven professionals know to avoid MSTR - Avis employé Employé (anonyme) MicroStrategy

1,0
2 sept. 2016
Employé (anonyme)
Recommande
Approbation du PDG
Perspective commerciale

Avantages

Just as companies have to weed out good candidates from the bad, you also to need to weed out bad companies that will waste your time and cripple your career. So, if you are reading this review because you are considering working at MSTR, the good news is you are NOT currently working at MSTR. Run, don't walk, away now. Ask any executive, recruiter, or placement professional in the Metro area about this place, and they will laugh and tell you to avoid like the plague. If you ARE currently working at MSTR, my condolences and good luck in your job search. Take some comfort in knowing you are learning exactly how NOT to run a company, treat employees, and earn respect. It will pay dividends in the future. As most reviews mention, the Tysons location and the on-site gym are the only real benefits of working at MSTR. Other than that, you will only find occasional glimmers of hope within the company. For example, you will find some talented staff, but they are slowly wasting away or leaving in droves.

Inconvénients

The staff are mostly trying to do their best, but the problem is with the system. There are deep systemic management issues that are beyond repair. When leadership fails, the company fails. Saylor gets a lot of flack as CEO of the company, but he does deserve credit as a visionary and entrepreneur. His biggest mistake, next to Usher, was empowering Tim Lang as CTO, as the biggest issues are found within the Technology division. Decision making is not decentralized, and the CTO continues to show why he is not fit to lead. If you have ever taken any leadership classes, you will be astounded to learn the CTO fits NONE of the criteria that defines an effective leader. With all the charisma of a block of wet tofu, he has no ability to unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers. No one will follow this man into battle, as they have all learned that his commitment to quality and productivity are a scam, because he has no idea what is actually needed. He has never walked in the trenches or even met many of his own direct reports. He sets new strategy each quarter, never realizing that in an Agile environment, culture eats strategy for lunch. And Agile at MSTR is a complete joke! It was rolled out to staff without any training, company buy-in, or vetting of tools. Even the most basic principles, such as develop on cadence and release on demand are ignored. Leaders that are true developers of people are not valued and are quickly and barbarically terminated, only to be replaced by narrow and self-interested "yes" men. Knowing that your CTO has an enormous impact on your day-to-day quality of life at work, such as what projects you work on, recognition you receive, professional development, and bonus payout, the entire Technology department is hosed. For example, your quarterly bonus will not be based on performance, but rather the CTO's algorithm of the month. Supervisor input is completely ignored. The staffing breakdown at MSTR looks like this: 50% are actively searching for new jobs; 40% are held hostage by their H-1B status; 5% are complacent, and 5% are narcissistic senior managers that can't see past their own ego. That is why the churn is 10-15% per quarter, and you will never work on a stable team. Be sure to read the latest Gartner report on BI, and play close attention to the cautions listed. MSTR is dying a slow death, losing out to innovative, nimble companies such as Tableau. In 5 years, MSTR will be the next Britches Great Outdoor, Hechingers, or Woodward and Lothrops--all defunct Metro-area business that were once relevant. I could honestly go on forever in this section--withheld bonuses, public reprimands, blatant nepotism, and a thousand other negatives that make MSTR the laughing stock of the Metro area. Just ask the technology professional sitting next to you; they probably have an MSTR horror story of their own to tell. Go ahead, I will wait. See, I told you ;)

Découvrez plus d’avis sur MicroStrategy

5,0
30 juil. 2025
Recommande
Approbation du PDG
Perspective commerciale

Avantages

Good pay and benefit. Great support for immigration and legal. Great work life balance. Supportive and talented co-workers

Inconvénients

No management level issues at least in my team.

1,0
5 févr. 2026
Recommande
Approbation du PDG
Perspective commerciale

Avantages

The people are really great outside of C-level leadership. Everyone fundamentally agrees that leadership sucks, but most have stayed due to a poor job market, and the stock price in late 2024 and most of 2025 were great. Now, I'd put that as a con.

Inconvénients

Leadership does not value marketing. If you’re considering a marketing role here, I’d strongly reconsider. Marketing is effectively split between Product (under the CPO) and Sales (under the CRO), and there is no dedicated marketing leader with a true seat at the executive table. In my experience, this creates an environment where marketing is expected to execute leadership’s direction rather than shape strategy. Thoughtful points of view, channel expertise, and data-backed recommendations often go nowhere. When you challenge the status quo, expert input can be dismissed as “marketing-splaining,” sometimes in a demeaning or cut-off manner. The tone from senior leadership can be condescending, and over time you learn that offering a dissenting perspective is rarely welcomed. The company also prioritizes speed and “gut feel” over data. Strategy shifts happen suddenly and frequently, with little consistency from quarter to quarter. It’s especially frustrating given the company’s analytics roots—signals, performance data, and what the market is showing often don’t meaningfully influence decisions. Culture and work-life balance are poor. The CEO has been explicit that this is not a 9–5 environment, and “do more with less” is a constant theme (less people, less budget, fewer resources). Hours are expected to be 8:30am–6:00pm, Monday through Friday, and there is limited flexibility for parents or anyone who needs to adjust their schedule for school/daycare drop-off and pickup. The organization increasingly expects full-time, in-office hiring at HQ with in-office days Monday–Thursday and Friday as WFH. There is also a “big brother” feel—badge scans are monitored and people are questioned through management if their time patterns don’t align with expectations. Over time, many employees keep their opinions to themselves around the C-suite because disagreement can carry consequences. The quarterly Peakon surveys also aren't truly anonymous, which discourages candor and gives leadership false positives narratives. They think everything is great - and they will not change. Layoffs are frequent and create ongoing job insecurity. Performance ratings can feel high-stakes, and many people operate with the assumption that roles are always at risk. The company’s identity has also shifted significantly. MicroStrategy (now Strategy) was founded as an analytics software company, but has heavily pivoted toward being a Bitcoin treasury story. When the stock is up, that’s a major reason some people stay. When it’s down, those perks don’t offset the instability and workload. Meanwhile, most employees are still supporting the software business, yet investment there feels inconsistent—especially with repeated reductions that leave remaining teams stretched thin. Benefits are also underwhelming for a tech company. There is no tuition reimbursement or meaningful budget for learning and conferences. Healthcare coverage is not particularly competitive, and the 401(k) match caps at $2,500 per year with a 4-year vesting schedule. Overall: if you’re early in your career and want a demanding environment with little balance, you will get that here. But if you want stable strategy, respectful leadership, investment in people, and a marketing function that’s empowered to lead—this likely won’t be a fit.

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