ASUG Reviews

3.0

42% would recommend to a friend

(48 total reviews)

Geoffrey Scott

31% approve of CEO

42% positive business outlook

ASUG has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 48 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The ASUG employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management and consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

48 reviews
2.0
20 Oct 2021

Great at Hiring, But That's About It

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

ASUG and the recruiters it works with have found some excellent people to work there. The majority of individual contributors and managers are highly skilled and personable. These same individual contributors created and ran a successful Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Council. The value system they set up most recently has good bones and intentions. The benefits are adequate.

Cons

The company does not seem to desire to keep any of these excellent employees they find. The CEO expressly said he only expects people to stay for a couple years, in response to the clear turnover issue they've had even for years pre-pandemic and increasingly since the pandemic began. When employees show their worth, skills, and willingness to support each other, they are met with more responsibility and little to no increase in compensation. If you do receive a promotion or a raise, don't hold your breath, it can take several weeks or typically months, because even leadership is overworked. A small association (fewer than 100 employees) is trying to work on a national level with members and volunteers across the country and Canada, span dozens of industries, run several events and campaigns at the same time (and during the fall, coinciding with performance reviews, to the chagrin of employees and managers), and keep up with all of the softwares and updates from SAP, a company with over 100,000 employees. All of this with unrealistic goals set, to be covered by small teams, often made up of many newer employees, who do not receive adequate training. There is a severe lack of proper onboarding and standardized team/job-specific training available, very little cross-training or contingency preparation for important roles leaving/being absent at all, and turnover from entire teams leaving with no proper documentation, and the company collectively shrugging and leaving those new folks to barely tread water. When employees expressed that they were overworked, especially amidst a global pandemic, they were met with an "I don't want to hear it" type response, from C-level folks who more so make enough money to be stressed and worked to their extent, while the lower levels absolutely do not. Leadership believes that you should never be late or even come close to working fewer than 40 hours, but has no issue with you working 50-60+ hours and in fact actually expects you to, even though a salary is really agreed upon for the standard 40 hour work week and only more as truly needed. Communication across the company is inconsistent and often messy. When 5 individuals were let go during the pandemic, they did not communicate the names to anyone, and let everyone gossip to figure it out. Same thing happened when a group of individuals were furloughed on Fridays for multiple months, no communication, just letting everyone have awkward conversations and struggling to work cross-functionally until they figured out who got to keep all of their hours and who took a pay cut. One of those individuals was our sole copy editor, but at least that didn’t last long. We didn’t see a single leadership member take a pay cut, just the underpaid individuals, who were just told to “take a walk outside, exercise, eat a healthy meal, step away from the computer for a short break, etc.” in response to being overworked and overwhelmed in a pandemic. And when people quit, sometimes we didn’t find out until their last week or even last couple days because leadership doesn’t announce it in a timely fashion. The CEO attempted to connect to employees during the height of the pandemic with individual phone calls. From my own experience and those I’ve heard about from others, he was dismissive, accusatory, and did not take any action items from any of these calls. His team “acknowledgements” show consistently that he is not familiar with the inner workings of the company. Between his general attitude towards those working the hardest at the company, the virtual and in-person event/meeting attendance dropping significantly, sponsor dissatisfaction, membership and renewals declining, and unwillingness to improve virtual offerings or diversify revenue, many of us are shocked the board hasn’t noticed or stepped in at all.

avatar
ASUG Response
4y
We appreciate you taking the time to provide feedback on your experience at ASUG.  We respect everyone’s opinions of their time with us, . One of our cultural virtues is Accountability, and we are accountable for our culture and what we consider best in class employee benefits. Thank you for your feedback on the performance review process. This is something we will review with our employees through our annual employee engagement process. As much as we appreciate your feedback on our communications cadence, we don’t agree that it is inconsistent across the company.  We have an All-Hands meeting, every other week, we share weekly announcements via email, and conduct regular roundtables with employees on a number of topics.  Additionally, we have had received great feedback on the mental health needs of our employees and will be announcing some new policies shortly. I reiterate that this is a great place to work that is keenly interested in listening to employees.  If you would like to discuss further, please let us know.  We never want to let anyone down and are sorry your experience wasn’t more positive one overall. 
2.0
26 Oct 2021

Bad Leadership, Bad Business

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If wanting to work for SAP or another SAP-focused company, ASUG is a good place to learn the lay of the land quickly. There are a lot of opportunities for contributing, though it can be exploited while work piles up. My manager was supportive, and I believe managers do want their direct reports to succeed. Benefits are of good quality and affordable. The downtown office is lovely, should you choose to work in person on your own terms. I really, truly loved my team. ASUG is great at hiring amazing people who have a lot to contribute. People quickly bond, and your coworkers can end up being some of your closest friends.

Cons

The business is confusing and constantly changing. A patchwork of revenue sources conflict with each other, leading to competing departments. The resulting workload was unsustainable—for employees and every customer/client served. Goals were impossible to meet due to oversaturation, but there was no sign of letting up. Managers do their best while juggling far too many responsibilities and expectations, while leadership appears to do none of the grunt work. When employees do speak up and suggest solutions (and they have been), leadership doesn’t listen (or fires them). Changes might come about with a DEI council and reorganization, but after experiencing a couple of restructurings and layoffs, it becomes apparent that what leadership promises is simply lip service. Restructurings don’t seem to actually change dynamics, and employees quickly learn how toxic ASUG can often be. Turnover was baffling, even pre-pandemic, with a slew of workers leaving every year. This was unsettling to employees, but leadership attempted to spin turnover as a positive. However, this left employees feeling expendable and not encouraged to stay at the organization, to the detriment of institutional knowledge, ability to serve the customer, and, ultimately, the business. The emails of employee departures or layoffs become at least a weekly occurrence, which is odd in such a small organization. One huge red flag for me was when managers told employees not to discuss amongst themselves an annual raise. This is not healthy and should never have happened. I hope having an individual in HR will help with fixing unethical workplace practices, as well as setting up transparent salary info and pay equity. But seeing as how leadership hired the person, I wouldn’t hold my breath.

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ASUG Response
4y
We appreciate your feed back .  We are very proud of the work we do and are thankful for the great work our employees do every day. Our employee benefits are better than market per the feedback we have been receiving from our recent hires. Thank you for pointing this out. With regard to ASUG’S DEI council, we know what we’re doing is unique and it’s making a positive impact on our culture and employees.  Post pandemic, our turnover rates are in line with what other employers are seeing. We are acting prudently and adjusting our hiring practices accordingly. We don’t share your view that sharing raise and salary information is an indicator of a “healthy” organization. We have welcomed a new HR professional to ASUG who was interviewed by a diverse team across all levels of the organization. We are excited to welcome new faces to ASUG who are excited by our mission.
2.0
15 Sept 2020

Interesting Work But Toxic Culture and Management

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- You learn a lot about different technology, especially in the SAP ecosystem - Room to grow in the company - Great place to work towards a certain title and then go somewhere better - Some really great people - Good benefits - Travel is plentiful if it's something you are looking for

Cons

- Culture of fear, distrust, and borderline surveillance (managers keeping tabs on everyone's time coming and leaving, monitoring chat logs, etc.) - White males excel and receive constant promotions and praise. Women and POC tend to not move forward as much. No explicitly discriminatory behavior, just trends. - Tries to be independent, but is actually held on a pretty tight leash by SAP. - Leadership can be very sensitive to feedback in that they get offended and angry. - Turnover is very high.

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ASUG Response
5y
Thank you for your feedback. First, I appreciate that you shared the “pros” and opportunities that are available to our team—there is a lot to learn here, there are so many great people, and there’s amazing potential for those who are invested in our organization and its mission. My team has and continues to strive toward offering career-building experiences and growth opportunities for all of our employees as we execute on our mission to help ASUG members make more possible. There are numerous and recent examples of employees taking on new challenges and expanding their skillsets in new roles. In addition, we created a Diversity and Inclusion Council that’s spearheaded by our employees, who volunteered to serve on the council and bring together a range of experiences and backgrounds. All of us are very excited about this important initiative. As an organization, we have embraced the values we created as a group, and we strive to live them every day in service of our customers. This has been especially true in 2020, as we have rallied around our values and each other during these times of great change and uncertainty. There’s always room for improvement, and we will continue to work toward achieving our goals and living our values in 2020 and beyond. Geoff Scott CEO, ASUG
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Glassdoor has 49 ASUG reviews submitted anonymously by ASUG employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if ASUG is right for you.