Glassdoor reviews

3.9

66% would recommend to a friend

(1,113 total reviews)
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Owen Humphries

84% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

Glassdoor has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 1,113 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Glassdoor employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informationstechnologie industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
2.0
Jul 11, 2022

After three years at Glassdoor

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It was a worthwhile place to work the first two years I was there.

Cons

n.b. In keeping with Glassdoor's Community Guidelines, I will not use proper names or specific titles to identify individuals I worked for Glassdoor for just over three years. During my first two years, even with all the upheaval the pandemic brought, I enjoyed working for the company. My first two years at Glassdoor lived up to the company's mission of helping people find a job they love at a place they love. I left the company for three reasons: • IT Upper management, specifically director and above • Uncertainty about Glassdoor remaining an independent entity • Workload The last issue, workload, was one that was an issue almost my entire time at Glassdoor. Yes, it was tasking to be expected to keep up a demanding pace of project after project with no time set aside for foundation building or even just to catch your breath. Yes, I believed during my entire time with the company that IT was never fully staffed, especially for the numerous things we were expected to accomplish. But these are not uncommon in IT, and I largely made a peace with it over time. If workload was the only fault of working for Glassdoor I would not have left. This was a contributing factor though, and one that became more grating over time because of the next two reasons. Glassdoor and Indeed are sister companies, both of which are owned by Recruit Holdings. Since the summer of 2020, whole functions and the staff who do them have been moved over to Indeed from Glassdoor by Recruit. When broaching the subject with management, we were told, “No, Glassdoor is not merging with Indeed” but it is hard not to look at the consolidation and not think it could happen to you someday; it was a looming threat. As this consolidation only began happening after Glassdoor cut a third of it's workforce in Spring of 2020, it was hard to be at ease with the state of the company. The primary reason I left Glassdoor was I no longer could work for IT upper management. I worked under the current upper management team for five to 12 months, depending on when each individual started with Glassdoor. After working for their department for this period of time, I concluded that I could not continue to work for an IT organization they were responsible for managing. They are the bosses and get to make the decisions, but I could opt to leave and I did. During my first two years with Glassdoor, I worked under a different management team comprised of an IT Director (who was “detailed” to Indeed for a special project and had not yet returned to Glassdoor by time I had left) and CIO (who was moved over to Indeed in 2021 and never came back, even though they spent a year pretending like he was still involved with Glassdoor) who often, I felt, managed by various forms of chaos. Yes, it could be frustrating at times, but it was workable. With these two individuals, I felt they would at least listen to my or my team's arguments and we could come to an agreement eventually. The team, IT Engineering, would eventually be allowed to do the work in the way we felt best as long as we accomplished the same end goal. With the newer IT upper management, there was seemingly no trust in the staff. Current IT upper management would repeatedly second guess efforts — not just on the larger roadmap things you would expect management to be involved with — but down to specific operational details like date and times announcements would go out or shifting around launch dates at the last minute. Communication within the department was fractured by their actions. They simultaneously balked at participating in regular IT day-to-day discussions and practices and attempted to control and maintain discipline over any communication happening within and coming out of IT. This could be taken as just a difference in personalities, but I felt it did a lot of damage to the feeling of “unit cohesion” IT staff and IT management had previously had. Current IT upper management compounded matters with their constant refrain of “we can outsource that”. AV, networking, systems administration — there was not a function of IT that they seemingly felt they could not ship out. Rather than hiring into the company, building on and fostering the team, they wanted to take functionality away. Of the few projects we tried outsourcing with, the IT Engineering team likely ended up spending more time on administration and cleanup than if we had just performed the work ourselves. Hiring specialists has it's place and can be useful, but this was something different. It also contributed to the belief they did not have trust in the staff. More so than the communication breakdown or the impression the team was being undermined by lack of support, I was most shocked by how they treated my team's manager. Brought in to be the Senior IT Manager, overseeing both IT Support (aka Help Desk) and IT Engineering, she started just a few weeks before current IT upper management but fit in so well it was like she had been there for years. Our manager exhibited Glassdoor's values of grit, transparency and just being a good person. She listened to her team and really considered our feedback. When needed, she told us to stop arguing and just get things done as asked. As a team, we never felt like she was telling us one thing and then turning around and telling someone else in the company something else. The Senior IT Manager was a real mensch. For whatever their reasons, current IT upper management actively worked to make life within Glassdoor uncomfortable for the Senior IT Manager. Everyone on the team detected the palpable dislike they had for the Senior IT Manager. It would show up in interactions during in-person meetings or offhand comments in email or Zoom calls. I personally had never seen upper level executives treat someone below them in the organization in such a petty manner. I felt it was unfair to the Senior IT Manager. I also could not escape the feeling that if they could do it to her, someone in management, what would stop them from doing it to the rest of us further down the line? If you spoke up or questioned them, why couldn't you be the next target? The IT Engineering team brought up all these matters and others with HR as part of our 360 review of current IT upper management in February. There was no meaningful response from the company or current IT upper management. I never felt unappreciated for the work I did at Glassdoor. I was well compensated and received bonuses, and I even received a SMASHIE, Glassdoor's equivalent of “one of the employees of the year” award, in 2021. The team I worked with was nothing but the best. I opted to leave because I did not want to work for this upper management team at a company with such an unset future.

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Glassdoor Response
3y
Thank you for taking the time to share your perspective. I appreciate the thought and detail you put into the review. Let me address your points one by one. Glassdoor’s Go-To-Market partnership with Indeed has led to significant business growth and enabled Glassdoor to invest in a differentiated strategy to support our vision of radical transparency. We value our operational independence because it helps us deliver on our strategy and allows us to opportunistically work with Indeed when both companies’ strategies are aligned. IT leadership strives to align our team’s efforts with the initiatives that support Glassdoor's mission, vision, and strategy. While competing priorities are often a challenge, we strive to balance the needs of the business with our resource level and create opportunities for growth and development across the team through our quarterly planning efforts and discussions about options with the team . Supporting our team’s career development and advancement is one of the pillars of our people strategy. We are happy when our talented team can pursue roles that align with their career ambition. We recognize there have been changes in the leadership across the team and are putting more focus on cultivating an inclusive culture that embodies Glassdoor values of transparency, innovation, GRIT and good people. Thank you again for sharing your perspective and your contribution to Glassdoor’s success during your time here. – Jun Chen, Head of IT and Security
4.0
Mar 6, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Glassdoor has a great culture and definitely hires the right people. - Collaborative team efforts and great interaction with Directors on a daily basis - Growth Opportunities: As Glassdoor is constantly growing, there has also been opportunities to try new things and be promoted quickly - Great snacks and games to play while youre taking a break from the grind

Cons

- No priority to hire Billing and Sales ops personnel. Glassdoor is so focused on selling our product and proving the value of our product, that they forgot to support the key functions of our business. What is it going to take for us to make this a priority??

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Glassdoor Response
7y
Thank you so much for sharing about your experience and your feedback. It's great to hear that you are enjoying the culture of collaboration and growth at Glassdoor. I also love the interaction we have created with our team members on a day to day basis, the great perks (and games) in the office, and the culture we have created of internal career paths for people here! We hear you loud and clear on the additional resources for our billing teams. We are adding additional staff, as well as automatizing many of the manual tasks that the team has been doing to free up more time. We have also just hired a new head of Accounts Receivable who is based in Chicago and has been doing an excellent job triaging the billing pain points. Keep an eye on the GRIT for updates and improvements in this area, and thank you again for the feedback. -Steph Jenkins, VP of Sales, SMB
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.

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Glassdoor has 1,269 Glassdoor reviews submitted anonymously by Glassdoor employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Glassdoor is right for you.