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Cornerstone OnDemand

Engaged employer

Caos and instability - Senior Digital Marketing Manager Cornerstone OnDemand Employee Review

1.0
14 Nov 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some truly exceptional colleagues doing their best despite the environment.

Cons

I rarely write reviews, but after two years at Cornerstone OnDemand I feel a responsibility to share what working here actually feels like. It’s November 2024. Cornerstone executes a poorly planned layoff cutting 10% of the workforce. No handovers, no transition plans, no mitigation. Teams are left to pick up the pieces on their own. What follows are months of confusion, duplicated work, and people trying to figure out how to deliver the same output with significantly fewer hands and absolutely no guidance from above. It’s March 2025. CEO Himanshu Palsule continues reshuffling his leadership team. At this point, no one under him lasts more than a couple of years. The constant turnover creates a vacuum of direction: every quarter brings a new “vision,” a new “strategy,” and a new org chart that will be replaced again before teams even have time to implement it. It’s November 2025. Exactly the same week as the previous year, another unplanned round of layoffs. Another restructuring. Another wave of fear. Another holiday season overshadowed by instability and chaos. Employees walk into meetings wondering: Will I be next? Will it be my turn this November? This is what Cornerstone has turned into. A place where November isn’t about planning for the year ahead, but bracing for the next cut. A necessary note on “Diversity & Inclusion”. Cornerstone speaks publicly about diversity, but my experience on the inside tells a different story. Over time, it became increasingly noticeable that senior hires around the CEO followed a very narrow pattern. Almost exclusively men, with very similar backgrounds, perspectives, and professional circles to his. Regardless of intent, this created a leadership layer that looked and thought the same, and it left many employees feeling that the company’s commitment to diversity was more of a slogan than a practice. Diversity isn’t only about gender or ethnicity. It’s also about diversity of thought, experience, and leadership styles. And Cornerstone’s top level has been moving in the opposite direction. The Return-to-Office issue. In the middle of all this instability, the CEO also began pushing return-to-office expectations that felt inconsistent and poorly thought out. Remote employees were left wondering if they were suddenly at higher risk, and the ambiguity added yet another layer of stress. Instead of providing clarity, the RTO push created more fear especially for people hired under fully remote agreements who suddenly felt their roles were less secure simply because they weren’t physically in an office. How can anyone perform in an environment where strategy changes at the last minute, teams are dismantled overnight, and layoffs become an annual ritual? How do you expect people to build, innovate, or care when they’re constantly looking over their shoulder?

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Cornerstone OnDemand Response
6mo
Thank you for sharing your feedback, we truly value the time and thought you put into it. We understand that leadership changes, return-to-office expectations, and organizational shifts can feel disruptive, and we want to acknowledge the impact these moments have on you and your teams especially when multiple changes are happening at once. Our commitment is to provide clear communication, greater efficiency, and a stronger sense of stability as we move forward. To do that, we are also focused on building a leadership team that reflects diverse perspectives and experiences and reducing layers of management. Please know that recent updates to our structure were made thoughtfully so that we can work smarter, move faster, and focus on continuing to build great products and deliver amazing experiences for our customers. Your voice helps guide these efforts, and we remain dedicated to listening and acting in ways that support both our people and our mission. Please continue to share your thoughts and know that we welcome ongoing dialogue and appreciate your partnership in shaping our future together. --Carina Cortez

Explore other reviews about Cornerstone OnDemand

5.0
7 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great leadership. Clear vision for growth and success.

Cons

Acquisitions created competing products and culture.

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Cornerstone OnDemand Response
1mo
Thanks for sharing this; it's great to hear your positive outlook on our leadership and vision as that’s something we really care about. There can be challenges that come along with acquisitions, especially when it comes to aligning products and culture. While these decisions are made to support growth and long-term success, they don’t always feel seamless in the moment. Again, I appreciate you sharing your perspective and wish you all the best. -Carina Cortez, Chief People Officer
2.0
8 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Originally, this company was very supportive. There were many layers of resources meant to make employees successful. After the purchase of the company by PE they have cut software, resources and staffing to increase profits. I would not say there are many advantages over other employers in the field today. The ability to work from home is a pro. Complexity of the software is a pro because the work isn't boring. There's always something to learn.

Cons

- no real path to advancement, Cornerstone used to promote from within, over the past several years the majority of hired have been external - management cares a lot about stats but doesn't care to educate employees on how to meet those expectations. Ex. If a employee gets a negative survey it isn't reviewed and strategies aren't shared for improvement. If an issue goes on longer than expected and it puts employees out of compliance with the resolution time standard, employees are told to fix it with no strategies for doing so. There is no analysis of issues. One caveat: my team has a new manager so there is a possibility that things will improve; however the directives come from the top down, so upper management still has a problematic philosophy.

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