Great in Paper but P&G has lost its heart. - Anonymous employee Procter & Gamble Employee Review

3.0
Dec 28, 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

The PVPs (Purpose, Values, Principles) are still the main reason people love P&G. Pay is also quite competitive and working with very smart and driven people improves your overall learning.

Cons

P&G has lost its heart. While there is still a seemingly strong drive for PVPs, this does not come to life. Senior leaders are not penalized for harassment cases filed against them, double standard compare to how low level employees are penalized. These are investigated but are dismissed as employees being too sensitive. People have had anxiety and depression because of P&G and P&G leaders. Many Top leaders are considered by people below as disrespectful but are lauded for their excellence, so it’s ok to be disrespectful and quite honestly A-holes as long as you sell soap. So young leaders feel that they have to be bad people to succeed. They brag about work life balance but they ask people to come back from leaves early, expect people to work on weekends and at nights to show DRIVE FOR SUCCESS. It’s also quite political - you can be MARKED X if one leader does not like you. This has ruined careers, with the way P&G moves employees as expats, where leaders stay only for a few years, one could have worked hard and produced strong results, in the pipeline to get promoted but one new leader can just ruin this and say negative things and the career is gone. And you just wait for the leader to leave, and try again. Or leave.

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Pros

Great culture, work life balance, good pay in the area

Cons

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5.0
Jun 23, 2026
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Pros

training in in depth, training on job, basic star interview questions good company, stable benefits are somewhat cheap

Cons

training can be a lot, you have about 1-2hr presentations biweekly where you get tested on different aspects of the plant, like steam system, water system, utilities etc, training can last up to 6 months paid once a month, irregular times on call, may have to work weekends depending on machines work long shifts, sometimes up to 16 hours depending on how machines run, expected to be at work by 6am for safety meetings, 5am sometimes depending on the site you work at, expected to stay if machines run poorly can be demanding- most entry level managers are fresh out of college and expected to train and manage individuals who have worked at the company for decades not very easy to change departments, takes a couple of years no matching 401k, they have their own profit sharing thing, if you quit before 3-4 years at the company, you lose the money

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