Wolters Kluwer reviews

3.7

69% would recommend to a friend

(4,062 total reviews)
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Stacey Caywood

85% approve of CEO

61% positive business outlook

Wolters Kluwer has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 4,062 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Wolters Kluwer employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informationstechnologie industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
1.0
Sep 19, 2019

Incompetence at its finest

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Big customer names within gas & oil Nice location - the hague city center Good for starters but no for too long

Cons

HR consists of a lot of incompetent staff one might encounter in their working career. They have no idea as to what to look for in candidates, the hiring process is therefore extremely slow as most (developers in particular) candidates get rejected when interviewed by prospective colleagues. Next to that, HR is known to have (private) relationships with employees. Personal relationships between HR and employees is a common occurrence and has lead to multiple employees being favored. At some occasions HR misuses their power to disadvantage other employees based on Friday night gossip over drinks or personal relationships. Organizational psychology is lost on the current HR staff; not being able to properly gauge prospects, lack of supporting healthy work-life balance (every month someone is on the verge of burning out or leaving), intimidating employees based on gossip or favoring others based on personal relationships are all sure signs of a dysfunctional HR department. Engineering management is clueless as to what needs to be done. Technical debt is something that is not a priority while quality is. The same goes for Product management, roadmaps are literally based on the highest bidder, meaning they change every other month leading to inconsistencies in deliverables, project managers cannot commit anything to their customers because of the way product management "prioritizes" deliverables. The product organization is more project-based motivated by money, this results in inefficient solution development as the "cheapest-solution-possible" is implemented to meet unrealistic deadlines. This among other things increases technical debt and in turn affects quality, a vicious cycle of inefficiency that no one dares to break. There is no departmental collaboration, project and product are always "at war" with each other losing sight of the fact that they have a common objective. It is really strange to witness how most of the problems experienced with customers are a result of the well-known inefficiencies within- and lack of collaboration between departments. Everybody knows what the problem is but nobody addresses the actual issues. Those that speak up or want to make changes do not have the power to do so. Meanwhile, HR and higher management are too busy "planning for the future", making it at present a very unpleasant working environment.

1.0
Aug 11, 2018

Management Implosion

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Competitive benefits (lots of vacation days).

Cons

I have never witnessed such horrible management. From the middle layer up to VPs, everything is inefficient, unproductive and offensive to hardworking team members. Management doesn't listen to employees, seems to have no idea how things actually work, and values management ego over people. HR is firmly aligned with the management layer at the expense of productive staff, and will betray employees rather than offer them assistance or protection. No career opportunities either -- you either stay on the working cog layer, where you are actively undermined and unappreciated, or you move to the management layer, where you are required to turn in your soul and become absolutely useless. It would be laughable if people’s livelihoods weren’t constantly being threatened. Anyone considering working here, beware.

1.0
Jul 1, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

None that I can think of.

Cons

I went into this job with a positive attitude but now I am desperately seeking other employment. No training, no database. NO DATABASE! what multinational publishing company doesn't have a proprietary databse/production system? Everything is done on excell spreadsheets. My "superior" spends all of her time in meetings and combing through spreadsheets line by line looking for mistakes or omittances so that she can write you up. I have been gaslit, lied to, and blamed for things that occurred before I even started working there. I was promised a remote position only to find out that I would be required to come into the office 2 days a week. I have been recorded without persmission, and spoken to like a child. ANd the worst part is that I have just as much experience in publishing as my "Superior" and significantly more experience in computers. The pay is sub-par and after the interview when I was offered the job I tried to negotiate a higher salary but was shut down immediately. The culture is very "Lord of the flies" in the respect thatthe only way to survive is to throw someone else under the bus. I chose not to do that to my co-workers and my boss was not happy. I have never received any kind of compliment from my boss. Not so much as a "good job." Just going into the office causes me to feel sick. If you like toxic work places then this is the job for you.

Viewing 16 - 18 of 4,062 Reviews

Glassdoor has 4,946 Wolters Kluwer reviews submitted anonymously by Wolters Kluwer employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Wolters Kluwer is right for you.