Pros
Smart people across the organization; a well-known product and solution with a generally happy user base. They offer a "must have" tool for sellers.
Cons
The Facts: - ZoomInfo’s stock declined sharply, falling from the high $60s in early 2022 to around $8 by April 2024 — a loss of $22 billion in market cap. - The company made multiple acquisitions (RingLead, Comparably), yet failed to integrate them meaningfully into the product, leaving value on the table. -Since 2022, ZoomInfo has seen five CMOs come and go, including an experienced and well-liked CMO being let go out of the blue in 2024. The current CMO has limited senior marketing experience but has been with the company a long time, signaling a preference for internal loyalty over fresh perspective. -The C-suite has seen near-total turnover in the past few years, with new executives stepping away from the CFO and CPO roles in the last 12 months . That level of churn is difficult for any company to absorb. -ZoomInfo wrote off nearly $130 million in bad debt — a sign that short-term sales pressure led to deals that never should’ve happened. -In an era dominated by PLG, the buying experience still requires multiple conversations with sales — a friction-heavy process that doesn’t align with modern buyer expectations. -The product marketing team saw significant voluntary attrition in early 2025. Nearly the whole team has left, and the head of Product Marketing, there for just over a year, was let go unexpectedly despite having a clear vision. - Revenue declined by $25 million year-over-year, a surprising shift for a company still positioning itself as a growth leader. On the legal side: -An active investor class-action lawsuit is underway, focused on whether the board overstated performance and failed to disclose customer churn risks. -ZoomInfo has paid over $29 million in settlements related to privacy and data collection concerns. -Employee benefits have grown more expensive while offering less each year. -The return-to-office policy has changed multiple times, creating confusion and frustration. A one-size-fits-all approach makes it harder to retain experienced professionals who thrive in more flexible environments.