Google reviews

4.4

87% would recommend to a friend

(48,353 total reviews)
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Sundar Pichai

82% approve of CEO

81% positive business outlook

Google has an employee rating of 4.4 out of 5 stars, based on 48,353 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Google 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

48K reviews
2.0
Sep 21, 2010

Used to be Paradise, now just a parking lot

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Brilliant, funny co-workers. Most of the time, if you make it through the hiring process in Mountain View you're a mensch. I cannot overstate how wonderful most of the people are. Insider access to technology that will drop your jaw on a daily basis. The ability, for good or bad, to help change the world. Spectacular bonuses that bring up the low salaries to a nice level. Google is a good place to join if you are brilliant, good at promoting your work to other engineers, and willing to work 70-hour weeks. The food is pretty darn good. The gyms in Mountain View are extraordinary; I don't know about other sites. They don't want you ever to have to step offcampus, and you pretty much don't.

Cons

Severe caste system: be an engineer or be nobody, and there are ranks within engineering. Quarterly semi-secret stack-ranking system; goal of getting rid of the bottom 5% every year. (Sound like Microsoft? Yup.) Bi-annual self- and peer evaluations. In short, the promotion and evaluation process is exhausting, neverending, and notoriously unfair. If you work in a "distributed office" (outside Mountain View) prepare to be seriously out of the loop and to have limited access to the cool projects and the ones that can build your career. The company used to be just as adorable as its publicity. Now it is so big that it can't be. By this point (2010) Sergey and Larry are completely clueless about actual life at the company and the open-questions meetings consist of somebody asking a serious question, Sergey making a joke, and the question dangling unanswered. When you hear someone bring up a serious personnel problem, it's either too confidential to discuss or it couldn't really have happened. The famous "20% project" where you get one day a week to work on projects you dream up yourself is openly admitted by senior executives to mean "work you do on the weekend", not "work you do on Friday". Do NOT depend on the legendary day-care program. Last I heard there was at least a year's waiting list. There used to be a three-year waiting list, but they solved that problem by raising the fees so high that most Googlers couldn't afford it. (Seriously. It was out-and-out explained that the oversubscribed daycare was an economic problem, and higher prices would resolve it.) Come to Google for technological challenge; come for brilliant co-workers. But don't come for a kinder, gentler software company; at this scale, there's no such thing.

3.0
Mar 22, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Google is leader on web search and has the best web search infrastructure. It is convenient for engineers to work on a single company-wide code base with same coding standard. Company reissues employee stock option to $308 recently. Bigger percentage of annual bonus compare to other companies I know of; $8000 per year 401k match; free meal and other perks. Company has the perception of being an innovative company. Friday TGIF with beer and wine. Engineers’ qualities are general fine. Many satellite offices so people don’t always have to relocate. For the first one or two years, you will be excited to explore the infrastructures, tools, systems and dream about a career path.

Cons

Office environment – It could be very noisy and interruptive with 5 to 10 persons sitting in one room. It’s not the best setting for strong and independent engineers to focus and develop solid code. There are such engineers in our office that hardly able to focus and be quiet for more than 30 minutes, always talk loud and flatter each other. I am annoyed and disturbed on an hourly basis. Project management: poor project management, lack of discipline and launch schedule. It’s very hard to estimate what and by when project will be launched. There is no one to enforce some discipline on code quality and stability. Launch delay quarter after quarter. When accountability finally comes and the project risks of being canceled, I see desperate launch push and poor code quality. Manager role: Managers and directors usually stay far away from daily project management duties. Manager does not know what individual software engineer is doing so don’t slightly expect such otherwise you will be disappointed. Majority managers are not technically strong and write zero or negligible code. Don’t expect much technical inspirations or lead by example from your manager. You will neither see much career mentoring nor other “soft” help from the manager. I had 1:1 with my previous manager maybe 3~4 times during the whole year period. Despite being the “manager” of our project, all his involvement was showing up a few times in our project meeting and later claims making big impact to the project on his self performance evaluation. Career growth: Despite the peer review model, the manager’s feedbacks appear to be what really matter. People that are vocal and suck up to their managers are very more likely to be promoted. If you are hard-working engineer that is able to and like to solve hard problems independently without making superficial noises, and expect Google to recognize your contributions, you will be very disappointed. I know some of such solid and senior engineers; about half of them already let Google. This is very counter-intuitive given the perception people have about Google. Project and team: Google is primarily an advertisement (instead of technology) company. The web search infrastructure is awesome however only need a relatively small number of people work on that. The available projects for most people, especially in satellite offices, are limited and not technically hard-core. If you are a senior and talented engineer, you may not find a local project that allows you to focus and solve hard challenging technical problems. It also becomes harder to find other senior talented engineers that you respect and love to work on, given senior engineers are leaving and junior engineers are joining. Engineering quality: I am disappointed with the code quality of my current team. Despite Google’s code review standard and practices, too many times people hastily touch existing code or add hacky code with no real testing. Such code checked in and deployed to data center. Overall it requires a lot more unnecessary iterations and bug fixes to stabilize the system. I don’t mind working 60 hours per week at all but it is frustrated to see most time wasted dealing with silly buggy integrated system. There is no engineering process to ensure code quality and stability or make a launch date more predictable. I see a general lack of engineering discipline and experience to implement very solid code from software engineers with no or just a few years experience.

4.0
Nov 3, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

yes most of the people who wanted to work at Google would think about all the perks they will get and yeah that's right. Google's benefits are pretty much the best so far I've ever recieved i.e. insurance, massage, food, etc. The people here are ones of the smartest people I've worked. Google has great products that everyone really enjoys to use.

Cons

lots of work, stress, some workers are acting a little too arrogant and look down other new employees. It's ridiculously hard to get hired at Google. They place a premium value on your pedigree (education, GPA, even outside interests) rather than on your skills and ability to contribute on a practical level. A Stanford grad with a 4.0 GPA doesn't automatically make a better employee than a UC grad. Or even (gasp!) someone without a degree at all. There's no career path, and no career planning. I never had a good manager, much less a mentor, the entire time I was there. The people who got promoted were the ones who kissed up and knew how to play the game. Low salaries. I know there are a lot of perks to "make up for it," but I'd rather have the money and decide how to spend it myself. Not being a new grad fresh out of college, I didn't care about the perks.

Viewing 79 - 81 of 48,353 Reviews

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