In-office 4 days a week at 8am.
Quota capped at 300%, even post-ramp. Never been at another company that operates that way. There are a few reps who have closed enough pipeline that their commission checks would not change between now and Thanksgiving if they went off the grid on a 3 month vacation starting tomorrow. Very weird to set up quota in a way that reduces the incentive to keep bringing in more business or, at the very least, incentivize sandbagging deals.
The training & enablement functions are brutal--thank god they reduced the number of those reps had to attend every week. The people that run them are great on a personal level, but their work product is just not helpful. Wish they had listened to all the reps who pointed out that they were useless earlier instead of waiting for the CEO to join one for the first time ever and cut off the presentation 3 minutes in because it was so painful. Generally speaking, just too many internal calls and exercises that aren't helpful. The actual sales managers (as opposed to training, enablement, RevOps, etc.) know what they're doing; listen to them and you'll be fine.
Some reps complained that we as an office weren't "collaborative" enough across teams, so they've tried several exercises in Chicago to appease these people. First they tried "Wacky Wednesday," which required everyone to switch seats for one day and sit next to reps on other teams (for those of us who keep useful resources pinned up at our desk, this was just an unnecessary inconvenience), then they transitioned to "scrums" where you spend the last hour of your Tuesday a couple times a month role playing in front of the entire office. No one I've spoken to enjoys them or finds them especially valuable. To the extent they are valuable, the goals could be achieved with a Slack message, a few minutes in daily team meetings that already happen, or in a 1:1 instead of these hour-long blocks with the entire office. If someone wants to put together an optional exercise like that, go nuts. Leadership mandates these things to appease a handful of people at the expense of everyone else. We have had visitors from other offices who found the courage to put 1:1 time on reps' calendars to pick their brains and share ideas. If visitors who have never met anyone in the office can do it, so can these people hellbent on forcing the entire office into an activity they don't find useful. There's not a rep in the office who wouldn't help or give advice if asked.