Glassdoor reviews

5.0

100% would recommend to a friend

(746 total reviews)
avatar

Owen Humphries

Not enough data to show CEO approval

100% positive business outlook

Glassdoor has an employee rating of 5.0 out of 5 stars, based on 746 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Glassdoor employee rating is 36% above average for employers within the Informatique industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

746 reviews
4.0
May 14, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I can't wait to get to work everyday at Glassdoor. It's an environment full of passion, great energy, and smart people. Great cultural leader - the CEO sets the tone of working hard, humbleness, listening to all points of view, and solving problems together. He's created a very special company. Exciting business - we're disrupting and making the world a better place everyday - it's a mission that everyone at the company deeply cares about. Flexibility - everyone works hard, but there's a lot of tolerance for getting your work done on your own schedule, working outside of office hours, etc. Strong Consumer and B2B businesses - great leadership and employees have made this company successful. Strong performance - continuous performance above target in most areas makes riding on this train extremely gratifying. Scrappy teams that "find a way" to get it done.

Cons

Despite all the amazing "pros", several fairly serious challenges have developed recently due to company's roots and massive growth year over year that need to be addressed. This is a very detailed list, because I care. I love this company and I want it to continue to be great. I would like our leadership to tackle these problems: 1. We work in a two-sided marketplace, and unfortunately, there's a big divide between the teams as well. The company originated on the consumer side, and most of the founders and people able to influence strategy and product innovation place the priority on the consumer side of the business. This makes it challenging to get resources and product improvements to improve the employer experience with our product. 2. It's sometimes unclear how and why product decisions get made, and although people can freely give their input to the product team, it's unclear how the work is prioritized, when things will be delivered, etc. It feels like the product roadmap should be born from a clear company and product strategy, but it feels like a handful of people are making the decisions based on their opinions, with lack of serious consideration of input from internal or external customers. Some of this may be due to a lack of product or engineering resources - but it's definitely a struggle to get engineering resources on anything outside of what product leaders have planned, which is causing us to ignore many innovative ideas with high revenue potential. 3. We're unfortunately developing a culture where you have to work hard to get resources because so many resources are cross-functional. The cross functional resources aren't working, because individuals make decisions on what they are going to work on rather than those decisions being made based on a clear strategy from the top. 4. We need to drink our own champagne when it comes to our culture. In the time I've been at the company, there's been little mention of our culture. We have amazing values stemming from our CEO, but we need to take advantage of those and get everyone on board - especially some of our top leaders who aren't always behaving in ways that align with the core cultural values that Robert believes in for the company. 5. Our strategy from the top is very detailed on the consumer side, but it often feels like our employer business strategy is a line item. I'd like to see everyone in senior management put as much thought into the employer strategy and take the initiative to get to know that business and its customers much better. 6. When entering new businesses or launching new products, we often don't put the strategic horsepower, resources, or dollars behind them. High expectations are set for revenue without the supporting resources or plan, creating a situation where it's difficult to deliver and teams continuously feel like their failing until the product is developed to the point where it provides true value. I'd like to see us define what will make a product and go-to-market strategy successful and get a significant portion of that done before we hold people to revenue targets.

1.0
Aug 20, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

People are awesome. Sadly many great people have left or are planning to. Life-work balance isn’t too bad but it goes in cycles.

Cons

Leadership has no clue what they are doing. The strategy shift became a weekly norm. Part of it was influenced by COVID-19 and our partnership with Indeed but it’s also because marketing leaders have no clue how marketing should operate. There’s a clear lack of experience and vision. People are hugely disappointed. We are incredibly good at designing internal presentations. More time is spent promoting oneself among your peers than thinking how marketing could contribute to the business. If that’s your career goal -- spend hours on building internal presentations -- come work for Glassdoor marketing team.

3.0
May 14, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people: The people were the singular reason I stayed at Glassdoor for so long. I love the people I met and it was the best work environment I could ask for!! I loved being able to go to work with coworkers who turned into my friends every single day. The office: Really nice updated office in Fulton Market, with free snacks, great views, an amazing rooftop, and free gym. No free parking, unfortunately. Career progression: Although unclear at times, I will say Glassdoor did see value in its employees and did hire within a lot. In my time there I had seen at least 10+ people get promoted, including myself, and it was great to see that. Benefits: Great health benefits, free food, bonuses, gyms in offices, dogs in office(Mill Valley office), unlimited PTO - however, they took this away for a month and then gave it back. I did learn a lot about myself personally and professionally at Glassdoor. It was definitely a great stepping stone in my career, and I will always remember my time at Glassdoor and think of it as mostly positive. Although laid off, the severance package is one of the best I have seen.

Cons

Glassdoor will never be the same. The only good thing about it was the people and most of the good ones are gone. They're probably merging with Indeed - I mean selling profiles to clients for thousands and thousands of dollars isn't going to cut it forever. Transparency: Funny this is at the core of their business model, right? 300 people were laid off with no warning. A whole org, gone. They let go a whole org with no warning, and we’re really supposed to believe this was not planned after weeks of reassurance we were going to be ok during COVID. Doesn't seem totally transparent to me. Pay discrepancy: Where do I even begin? Throughout my years at Glassdoor there was never a clear reason as to why the pay discrepancy was so vast on my team. People in the same role making 20k more than others, and the professional pay scale they used to determine our pay had the incorrect job description. Also, pay in general is on the lower side. Senior Management: There is one leader in senior management for CS that should not be there. They have made MANY employees cry on multiple occasions and do not know how to have difficult conversations with empathy. They are simply rude. CS senior leadership was never fully transparent behind why changes were made. I am honestly not even sure what they did all day bc it was most definitely not making the org any better. The role: There was NEVER a clear idea of the split of work between CS and sales. CS of course got blamed for everything and a Sales director was quoted saying “I wish I could blow up all of CS and start over”.. Really??? They would measure us on KPI’s that they set that didn't even make sense based on our scope of work, and then present those KPI’s in meetings in front of the whole org. Not to mention most of the reports for those KPI’s were broken. The whole CSS team was always overworked, undervalued, unrecognized, and underpaid.

avatar
Glassdoor Response
6y
Dear CS Alum Thank you for taking the time to share your perspective. I’m glad that your time with Glassdoor CS was positive overall. I agree with you that it is really the people which sets Glassdoor apart from other companies. Within CS, we have been very fortunate to find and bring together a group of people who truly care about their work and - more notably - about each other. It has been very upsetting to say goodbye to so many good people in the recent layoffs and I don’t disagree with you that Glassdoor will not be the same going forward. But I also believe that we can grow through this, that this moment does not ultimately define us and that we have the opportunity to once again be a great place to work (albeit different to how we were in the past). It is clear that the impact of COVID-19 on our business and the resulting need for company layoffs caught you, and others, by surprise and I’m sorry that you were personally impacted. Unfortunately, COVID had a much faster and more significant impact than we had anticipated. I hear your feedback and agree that we could have been clearer at communicating the acute impact on global hiring and the resulting risks for our business. In relation to pay, Glassdoor has defined pay-bands for each role and level in the company, defined by location. Within CS, your position in the pay-band is a function of your prior experiences and demonstrated performance in the role. Linked to this, it is possible for individuals in the same role to have different levels of compensation. Pay-bands are reassessed annually by our HR team, including a review of job descriptions, and benchmarked against “the market” for companies of our size and industry. As the leader of CS, I’m very conscious that our overall employment offering - inclusive of pay, benefits and the experience of working at Glassdoor - must continue to improve if we aim to attract and retain the best people. Lastly, I was concerned to hear your feedback in relation to difficult conversations with CS management. What you’ve described isn’t consistent with the culture of our team or the expectations that I have for our leadership group. I would encourage you to contact me directly to discuss this further, or if you prefer, you can also reach out to HR. Thank you for being part of Glassdoor CS. I do wish you all the best for the future. Chris, VP Customer Success
Viewing 52 - 54 of 746 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,268 Glassdoor reviews submitted anonymously by Glassdoor employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Glassdoor is right for you.