CrashPlan Reviews

2.6

28% would recommend to a friend

(21 total reviews)

27% positive business outlook

CrashPlan has an employee rating of 2.6 out of 5 stars, based on 21 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there.

Reviews by job title

21 reviews
1.0
4 Feb 2024

Profit over People

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexibility to work from home

Cons

There has been zero investment in people despite promises from Millpoint during the acquisition. Salaries are below average and meaningful raises are hard to come by. There is no longer personal development opportunities or anything else that would affect profit. The CEO is completely invisible and does nothing to inspire or motivate employees. What was once a great company (Code42) is now not somewhere that I would recommend to anybody.

2.0
30 Jan 2024

Once great

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people are still great, work/life balance is terrific, and the compensation is slightly above average

Cons

Has succumbed to the whim of capitalism; is being squeezed by its new owners for every dollar possible, to the detriment of the employees and product, both which made the company once great to work for. This results in underinvestment in the employees, product, systems, and importantly vision, leading to low moral, employees cruising on auto-pilot, loss of customer focus, and an inward looking race-to-the-bottom approach to running a business, with no desire to expand globally.

1.0
4 Jun 2025

Into the toilet. Do not recommend

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Within the technical organization, the work was pretty easy. CPG inherited a product and stack from Code42 and just had to keep it from tipping over onto itself. - My team was fun to work with - Compensation was pretty good (initially) when the company was launched, because the market conditions necessitated it

Cons

- The product is centric to a model that is rapidly dying. "Documents that exist on people's laptops" and the need to back them up, is a model of operation that is rapidly dying in the current era of software. - The work was easy because the leadership teams had no idea what to do to grow the company and had more or less stopped trying. The full leadership team meets every morning and it is not uncommon for the day's direction to be changed based on that day's whims. - A private equity group that owned the company placed priority on acquisitions - and a company that was acquired performed almost a reverse takeover of the company. The new CTO used Crashplan's revenue to fund technical roadmap initiatives that solely benefitted his former employees in India, and proceeded to start drawing down technical employees in North America - Technical leadership was risk-averse to a fault. It was common that initiatives to streamline software operations were spiked because of lack of understanding, and perceived risk. - There was a lot of misplaced faith in some leaders who were demonstratably unequipped for the jobs they were tasked with (Product/Engineering/QA management) I would be shocked if Crashplan, as both a product and a company, were still a going concern in the same format in January 2027.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 21 Reviews

Glassdoor has 21 CrashPlan reviews submitted anonymously by CrashPlan employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if CrashPlan is right for you.