OpenTable reviews

4.1

78% would recommend to a friend

(670 total reviews)
avatar

Debby Soo

80% approve of CEO

77% positive business outlook

OpenTable has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 670 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The OpenTable employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informatique industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

670 reviews
1.0
Jul 19, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great culture(used to be), good physical location.

Cons

Opentable's values diminishing a lot recently. New leadership have no clue on what they are doing, how to improve business value and return of investment. They were building the apps/services with no proper outlook. No new project is attractive. Won't bother to keep the great talent, employees lost credibility of the management. Benefits were getting worse year by year. Comp structure/plans were not attractive/competitive any more.

2.0
Jul 13, 2018

Opentable is not what it was 2 years ago...

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Young and enthusiastic people but that's about it

Cons

Superficial culture that revolves around drinking alcohol. Inner circles that are hard to get into. USA making decisions for everyone. No opportunities and generally feel like the company is going downhill. 2015 Opentable was fun, 2018 is complete opposite.

1.0
Nov 18, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The only pro is that due to OpenTable's size and foothold in their industry there are so many employees that some of them are cool. That's it. Same as you would get at any company with hundreds of employees. If you want to think of this as a pro: it used to be a great company to work for. Two CEOs ago. When they cared about being a good employer. Long time ago.

Cons

Short version: the highest level of micromanagement at any company. Well, the company has gone through three CEOs in as many years. That says a lot about how the company operates. Along with those changes, and specific to the Support organization, the top-down leadership of OpenTable Support, almost entirely white middle-aged men, is cold, callous, ineffectual, divisive, and worst of all phony. That's probably the most insidious thing that I could advise you about. Like a lot of tech companies OpenTable can roll out a great red carpet: they have sodas/coffee, there's a lounge with video games, they're spending a lot of money during and just before Covid hit to build out a new office. Not dissimilar from an abusive parent who attempts to buy your love. The senior leadership (VP, Directors, Managers) can make small inoffensive gestures to make the people feel well taken care of, or feel heard, in shortsighted unimportant ways. The management team will talk at length about this ineffable, indescribable "*magic* that happens when we're all in a room together" as an excuse to bring people back into offices as soon as localities allow, totally disrespecting the fact that the Support organization's low-level rooms aren't actually given any agency to positively affect a single thing. That magic might exist in engineering rooms, or product management rooms. It doesn't exist at OpenTable in Support rooms. We just follow a script. OpenTable Support follows a "coaching" system. However a more accurate name for it would be a micromanagement system. Higher up employees on the team like the Senior CSRs and Supervisors might try to convince you that they welcome creativity, however any creativity that you're allowed is under such tight scrutiny, and requiring such a high level of conformity that to call it creativity is nonsense. Let's be explicit about what this "coaching" system is, particularly as it is the biggest determination into promotions, advancement, and raises. A person on a QA team randomly selects a single case that you worked in a week, grade it for conformity to their system, and then report that single case per week to your manager so they can coach you on what you did wrong. Many of these categories are highly subjective and very little recognition is paid toward what you did right. If you get a single thing wrong within a category the entire category is marked as not having been met. At the end of the year virtually your entire raise is based on conformity to this system. 52 randomly selected cases. How many cases you worked doesn't really matter. CSAT scores, creative problem solving, deep dives into highly sensitive or more time consuming cases, all that has no bearing. Just conformity to their system. The Pillars of Excellence. I strongly advise against you taking a position at OpenTable's Support team unless it's just a brief stopover on your way to a bigger and better things.

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Glassdoor has 721 OpenTable reviews submitted anonymously by OpenTable employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if OpenTable is right for you.