Procter & Gamble reviews

4.1

81% would recommend to a friend

(14,289 total reviews)
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Jon R. Moeller

84% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

Procter & Gamble has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 14,289 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Procter & Gamble employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Produktion industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

14K reviews
3.0
May 17, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A lot of freedom to lead projectsand work with other teams, groups, sites and countries. Some great people to work with. Site is located in a good area.

Cons

Old school hierarchical elitism from the Oxbridge PhD management. Don’t invest in developing employees which are treated as disposable. Like it or leave. Demoralizingly slow to do anything, from project initiatives to people progression. A career system that encourages people to be publicity machines for their own careers instead of actually doing something constructive. Powerpoint experts who have forgotten any science, engineering or technology, but that’s OK they play the visibility game and get rewarded.

2.0
Oct 6, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are some great things about working at P&G: -the company has fantastic benefits at best in class cost to employees -if you joined long ago the Profit Sharing Trust company contribution percentage is terrific (though it must be held in PG stock for a long time) -things are generally 'nice' - lots and lots of money is spent on everything

Cons

Ah - so many cons these days. This company feels directionless and has an unhappy, self-serving culture that is entirely focused on 'whats in it for me.' There are many things cited in many of these reviews that are certainly true - big, slow, bureaucratic, etc etc. I don't quibble with those, they are all true. Fundamentally I think this company is in deep trouble due to a sense of arrogance and entitlement that has seeped into every aspect of the culture. -Leaders talk about a "right to win" as though it has been ordained that eventually P&G and its brands will assume their rightful place at the head of the pack and all will be rewarded. -The company has curtailed hiring and has been handing out severance packages in order to try to make earnings figures, no one seems to realize that this results in an aging, like-minded workforce made up of those without the risk tolerance or skills to compete externally. Rather than getting rid of those who don't contribute this is the expensive, cowardly way out. -The value proposition for newer employees is MUCH worse than for those who joined long ago (in terms of advancement, compensation, profit sharing) so the few talented youngsters that do get hired are turning over like crazy. -After buying brands, seeing them stagnate, throwing one CEO under the bus, and bringing AG back for an encore, the Board has embraced "focus" as a strategy, selling off what AG put together in the first place. There is no change in culture, process etc underway - just a smaller version of the mess of recent years. I have heard no compelling rationale suggesting this is a winning plan. -When things go right its due to P&G brilliance, when they don't it is always externally driven - devaluation in Venezuela, foreign exchange headwinds etc etc. No accountability at any senior level. -Some people at the VP/Band 6 level have polish but no ideas and are very poor leaders. Lucky for them they can rotate jobs again and again, never really owning anything long enough to see a plan all the way through and have to live with the results.

4.0
May 21, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

P&G Managers are allowed opportunities to lead/influence in a broad spectrum of topics and across geographies. Compensation and Benefits are very good and at times are hard to beat outside of P&G for the same level in an organization. The Company is financially strong with a great pipeline of new products which will create success for years to come (if managed correctly). Young managers have opportunities for development which are not available at other companies. A great company to join and learn at. It's only when one gets higher in the company that the systemic problems which hold it back from it's former greatness are seen.

Cons

Politics take precedent over common sense. Cincinnati offices are politics on steroids. Too many approvals to obtain and too many people saying "no" - really slows the business and perpetuates problems which need to be solved. Ideas take forever to come to light. Ideas I had which took 2 years to approve, and fund, took less than 3 months to to reach the same stage at the company I joined upon leaving. Great ideas are stifled as senior management. Directors and VP's are too cautious and reluctant to support and surface ideas. I was told more than once that my ideas were great but leaders did not want to share them for fear they would be responsible to execute. There was a time at P&G when those who could deliver great results and develop organization to sustain them were valued and promoted. However, since about 2000, the desired characteristics for promotion shifted more to those with great vision and the ability to sell it. Commitments and delivery began to take a back seat and the company results have suffered ever since. Several outstanding leaders left the company as they were not politically connected and could not rise to the top. These same leaders are now highly successful elsewhere including in roles leading P&G's competition. It was a shame P&G lost these great leaders - again these were the ones who could actually deliver.

Viewing 34 - 36 of 14,289 Reviews

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