LinkedIn reviews

3.8

65% would recommend to a friend

(7,693 total reviews)
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Ryan Roslansky

65% approve of CEO

49% positive business outlook

LinkedIn has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 7,693 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The LinkedIn 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

8K reviews
2.0
Jun 3, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The company has good benefits, lots of perks, and really goes out of its way to try to ensure employees are happy.

Cons

* If you're going into SRE, you might land on a team where everything is toil and there is no real coding/project/engineering work. * There is a culture of "build everything in-house," so the tools-related skills you learn here won't be useful in the rest of your career. Imagine you work as a carpenter and suddenly after changing the company you work for, they tell you that they don't use hammers or nails, they use combobulators and whizbangs, and every standard tool you've acquired skill in has a unique replacement in this organization. So you spend 2 years or more of your life getting good at combobulators, whizbangs, and whatchamacalits, then you leave the company to resume your career as a carpenter elsewhere. What do you think you gained from your time at that company? Atrophy. Atrophy is what you gained. You are now less skilled at using a hammer and nails. What's more, the world of carpentry has since developed new techniques and industry-standard tools that your peers are pros in and you've never heard of them. * Learning these internal tools is painful. There is no standard to documentation. It's all kept unversioned, outdated, with low discoverability in old wiki pages. The only way to confidently learn the tool is brute force -- asking on Slack channels or email lists, inquiring if a snippet you read on the outdated documentation is still current, mixed with actually checking out the tool or project and just reading the code. * There are two kinds of SRE teams at LinkedIn. Those that engineer tools and those that use these custom-engineered tools. If you are on the latter kind of team, expect to spend all your time configuring these custom combobulators and whizbangs, or doing migrations from OS to OS, kernel to kernel, java version to java version (yeah, they're still transitioning off on-premise infrastructure that's managed like pets, not cattle).

2.0
Mar 4, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Good perks and great office. 2. Microsoft stocks and 401k match.

Cons

1. Working in LinkedIn's customer success team can really stunt your professional growth, the role adds very little value and you don't learn much, and with the new changes of moving customer success under the support org i feel that this is going to continue. 2. Weird cult like culture where you're forced to conform, 30% of your time is spent in self-promotion and creating visibility for yourself and this comes at the cost of customer service. 3. The middle management is not inspiring, and adds very little value. 4. The workload has increased significantly with no correction in pay. 5. Lots of changes in the org with attrition in senior leadership is a cause for concern, 6. Very limited growth opportunity, most of the customer success managers are stuck without any place to go because the skills they learn at LinkedIn are not transferrable to other companies and roles.

Viewing 715 - 717 of 7,693 Reviews

Glassdoor has 9,391 LinkedIn reviews submitted anonymously by LinkedIn employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if LinkedIn is right for you.