LinkedIn reviews

3.8

66% would recommend to a friend

(7,637 total reviews)
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Ryan Roslansky

67% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

LinkedIn has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 7,637 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
3.0
Dec 27, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great work life balance (at least for the projects and tools team, for the client facing team, it's bone crushing hours). The location of the office is very convenient. The team's culture is great, very positive, supportive and optimistic. Team lead and managers lead with empathy and are very open to feedback.

Cons

Within the org that I was in (GSO - Global Sales Org), salary for technical individuals are capped at below market, so eventually most technical people go to other companies after a few years. The senior management has a very "old corp" culture when it comes to promotions ("pay your dues", "let's not set a precedent", "we'll talk in a year") that is based on age and tenure rather than skill. The management structure also favors MBAs managing technical teams, so the technical ICs have to teach their managers, while not getting meaningful feedback and support. This I believe was unique to the GSO and not a problem for other parts of LinkedIn. Career path was another problem. There's a very low ceiling within the GSO for an IC. You'd hit that ceiling very quickly and will have to make the decision to either be a manager, or be an IC with a capped comp even though you are providing more value year over year. Within the GSO, management is the holy grail (a bit like old corp) for many people, and because managers don't do IC work, some ICs try to learn how to be managers by getting other people to do their work. It's a talker's culture within the GSO, not a doer's culture. There are more meetings than war room sessions. People sit down and talk about execution, talk to stake holders, looping in everyone but their grandmas, and then get the poor IC who is the lowest paid person at the table to slug it out. Management often take credit for that work by representing it to senior leaders without crediting back to the IC. Morale was a problem on our client facing team because their managers are very much "yes men" serving the sales teams, that means the client facing team has to work all hours, have surprise quick turn around projects, and are faced with management practices that are contrary to LinkedIn's core values (such as a manager saying "I'd be careful about your professional image" when a teammate voiced concerns about being verbally abused during a meeting). The senior leadership also has an ineffective way of dealing with talent competition. The comp package seems to be tightly regulated and capped below market, it is fairly easy for competitors to swoop in with what seems to the candidate as amazing offers. The management's response to this has been to create uncertainty with the new position, and attempt to offer delayed rewards (we'll promote you in a year) - basically anything that doesn't involve in materially making good on a better offer. The person leaving will be subjected to repeated meetings with their manager and their superiors to question the candidate's intent, whether if they were team players, and whether they'd want to let their team down. All in all, not a great way to try to win someone back, and makes them more determined to leave.

1.0
Jul 23, 2024

C-Suite needs to get on board with reality

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The culture and LinkedIn used to be great, and you really can't go wrong with Microsoft Stock as part of compensation

Cons

LinkedIn Executives don't seem to have any clear sense of strategy or how to help LinkedIn grow. They're constantly looking for new shiny things and have moved far away from helping professionals succeed in their careers. Just look at the AI-created help articles and Games as examples of the lack of clear focus and strategy - not to mention the Feed becoming less and less professional. Due to this lack of direction, people are being asked to work harder, longer, and for less pay. (That's right, because the company isn't doing as well within the context of larger Microsoft, LinkedIn is cutting down significantly on raises, promos, and stock refreshes. Many people hit their 4 year cliff, and due to a lack of additional stock see a ~30% hit in their total annual compensation. It's incredibly uninspiring and de-motivating). Finally, HR is a joke. There are male leaders who are notorious for not working well with women, and HR does nothing about the fact that all of the women under these leaders quit, are managed out, or leave. Managers are being encouraged to performance manage out more employees so the company can avoid layoffs. Given the current trajectory, it's possible that LinkedIn will plateau, if not decline, in the next 5 years.

3.0
Mar 9, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Was amazing up until about Jan 2023. Culture was off the charts. Everyone is super nice, caring and collaborative. Employees want to see each other win. It's not just about individual achievement. WLB is pretty good.

Cons

Around Jan 2023, it started shifting, primarily due to the waves of layoffs that have been hitting since then. The layoffs have taken a huge toll on the morale at the company, and the energy has shifted to be one that's more paranoid, less of a feeling of security (which is never conducive to the highest levels of productivity so it's a vicious cycle). LI has also back peddled on their remote work policy. For the past couple years they touted how much they trusted their employees, that research is showing how productivity is just as strong for remote workers, and that everyone could choose where they wanted to work from. Now they're forcing everyone to be in the office several days per week - despite the research showing productivity is just as high at home.

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