Great company, great culture - Program Manager SAP Employee Review

5.0
Oct 7, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Genuinely fosters a sense of caring about employees Great company culture Fairly competitive salaries Good benefits

Cons

1. SAP varies the benefits it offers its employees based on geography. Employees in the US, for example, get significantly less paid parental leave than those in Europe. Ex. In Europe, the *minimum* a new mother can take is 15 weeks, and she can take up to 26. In the US, the *maximum* is 12 weeks. For a company that talks a lot about taking care of its employees, it seems somewhat hypocritical to treat them all differently, working within the minimum guidelines laid down by law. 2. Internal raises and salary increases are fairly stagnant. Practically the only way to get a significant raise within SAP is to get a new job in a different department. This is awful, because then those with much higher expertise and product knowledge just... leave. Regular actual raises for increased expertise and product knowledge would save SAP a fortune in hiring and training newbies, as well as improve employee morale and help retain good workers.

Explore other reviews about SAP

5.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-great enviroment -inspiring people -work balance

Cons

-unclear directions and task -lack of support -long project timeline

4.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people at SAP are genuinely nice, and the culture is generally supportive. The work-life balance is good to an extent, but when you're busy, you're BUSY. SAP is highly complex so expect to take a year to ramp up.

Cons

Only way to get a high salary is if you're hired externally. They do not reward employees who are loyal to the company. Closed opportunities often have to go through the Compensation Exception Committee, creating uncertainty around earnings. Prepare for constant change, whether that's solutions being removed from your sales bag, account shifts, territory realignments, or changing compensation policies. Quotas can be difficult to attain

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