Not what it once was - Anonymous employee LinkedIn Employee Review

3.0
Feb 2, 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits & perks if you care more about having free meals and "team outings" more than competitive pay and professional growth. Reputable brand. Some managers are great. Flexibility to work from home (but this varies widely depending on your managers' personal philosophy). Experience here will get you further after you leave than when you're there.

Cons

LinkedIn's culture has become less culture and more cult as time has gone on. If you don't "fit" with a team and attend every little post-work happy hour, you won't get ahead and will noticeably be ostracized. Middle managers are promoted based on personal relationships or the school they attended more than their performance or qualifications and are largely parrots of what the Directors are telling them to do with very little ability to affect real change. Summer Interns nearly exclusively come from Ivy League schools for no reason, despite a mission to empower youth and provide opportunity for everyone. Internal mobility is not as prevalent as they would lead you to believe - many internal opportunities are never made available to current employees or end up being given to external candidates with little explanation why. They claim to be a "members first" organization, but the every day free member rarely if ever came up in conversations about the future of the business or all-hands as time went on. As they grew, I watched LinkedIn turn into a typical corporate bureaucracy with roadblocks and red tape at every turn to get things done. Business seemed to shift to care more about the bottom line than the member or customer. The salesforce is all extremely young which heavily weights why LI's ratings continue to be so high because it's often someone's first job, so of course they're going to think it's great to get free food and ride scooters. It was extremely rare to see an employee over the age of 45 or so. While they do have diversity and inclusion initiatives, this sometimes seems to only exist to be able to report on it rather than truly caring about diverse thought and experiences.

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5.0
Jun 14, 2026
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Pros

The company offers excellent benefits.

Cons

There were no flaws, everything was very comfortable.

4.0
Jun 11, 2026
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Pros

LinkedIn has a strong engineering culture, smart and supportive teammates, and meaningful product impact at a large scale. I have had opportunities to work on complex systems, collaborate with experienced engineers, and learn from cross-functional partners across product, design, data, and infrastructure. The benefits, flexibility, and internal learning resources are also strong.

Cons

Because the organization is large, decision-making can sometimes be slow, and priorities may shift before projects fully mature. Promotion expectations can feel different across teams, and the number of meetings can make it harder to protect deep-focus engineering time. Cross-team ownership is not always as clear as it could be.

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