Adyen reviews

3.7

72% would recommend to a friend

(906 total reviews)
avatar

Pieter van der Does

81% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

Adyen has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 906 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Adyen employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Financeiro industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

906 reviews
2.0
Jan 7, 2019

Poor Guidance for Entry Level and Working Students.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Good opportunity to learn. Flat corporate culture. Initiating your own project is encouraged. Great Lunch and Coffee Excellent Location in Amsterdam Fast Pace Industry A diverse group of people.

Cons

Task in Operational and Technical Support are repetitive. Too much independence is given to entry-level and junior staff. Custom-built software is prone to errors and counterproductive. A very forced work culture. Employees have to pretend to (' talk straight' and 'launch fast'). Alot of big egos and subtle politics. But this differs from team to team. New hires are given tasks with little context and guidance. Telling the staff that they are responsible for their own development is Adyen's way of not taking responsibility for proper training. Some teams lack chemistry and proper guidance form team leads.

2.0
Dec 5, 2018

Ok, but not for too long

Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

- Free lunch and really good coffee - Beautiful office, central location in Amsterdam - Hours are very good. People generally don't make a fuss about how early/late you choose to come in as long as you get your work done. - As an industry, payments are more interesting than your typical development job at an e-commerce site.

Cons

I don't see myself staying at Adyen for much longer than a year for a few reasons: - The senior developers are really not open to change. They've decided that their way of doing things for the past 10 years is the way to go and that's that. For instance, they prefer writing and maintaining custom tools for streaming data processing instead of using well-documented and reliable open source solutions. Even considering all the security concerns that come with using third-party software, custom-building everything is just error-prone and counterproductive since it takes time and resources away from developing Adyen's actual products. This is the most glaring example of their way of thinking I could briefly provide here. Really, their stubbornness is evident every time a discussion about best practices or anything code-related comes up. - It follows from the point above that as an Adyen developer you get very little exposure to new technologies, which makes the job itself quite boring and is probably a bad thing career-wise. They explain this lack of new tech as being very concerned about security, which I appreciate since we are talking about a payments company. But being overly risk-averse is not good for anyone involved. - The culture ('we talk straight', 'we launch fast', etc.) feels very forced. Some people seem to love the culture, or are very good at pretending they do. To me it feels like there is this constant tension as company politics and egos clash but everyone still pretends Adyen is always wonderful. It feels to me that a lot of people are just going along with it until they are ready to move on to something else. And some people thrive in this culture and end up becoming decision-makers for better or for worse. - This may differ from team to team, but the onboarding process for new developers is not good at all. New hires are given tasks with very little context (and not everyone has prior experience in payments). Sure, they can go around asking anyone and everyone who might be able to guide them, but I think team leads should feel a greater deal of responsibility in seeing how their new developers are doing and to provide some guidance. - The team leads, although they really are smart people, are focused solely on the company and their respective products and pay very little attention to people management. Some teams are malfunctioning, but the team leads either don't notice or don't care. This doesn't make for a pleasant working environment some days.

2.0
Oct 12, 2018
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

The systems are well-built (if eccentric), the coffee is good and the colleagues are all very, very smart, nice and motivated. It's possible to get things done in weeks or months, as opposed to years (especially compared to other companies). The atmosphere **seems** really nice. The compensation is good and the office is also pretty nice.

Cons

There are a TON of politics going on underneath the surface that the naive and junior members simply don't see. If you end up getting anywhere near this -- or end up irritating some of the senior/"inner circle" people, prepare to experience some very cold shoulders and very, very nasty politics. There are basically 3 groups at Adyen: the board, the technical/sales "old guard" and another group who is somewhat newer and trying to change Adyen. Not all of the board/direction seems to know what's actually happening on the workfloor. Lastly, working at Adyen will not help your technical career, especially if you stay for longer than 3 years. While there is some innovation, the technical old guard has been doing things the same way for the last 10 years and is not prepared to change. Staying at Adyen for more than 3 years means that you've been paid very well for 3 years but have lost 2 years of your career. Turnover is very high, by the way. It seems like roughly 1-4 people quit or is fired every month.

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Glassdoor has 1,253 Adyen reviews submitted anonymously by Adyen employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Adyen is right for you.