Google reviews

4.4

87% would recommend to a friend

(48,528 total reviews)
avatar

Sundar Pichai

82% approve of CEO

81% positive business outlook

Google has an employee rating of 4.4 out of 5 stars, based on 48,528 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Google employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologia da informação industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

49K reviews
1.0
Jun 30, 2023
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

-Excellent compensation and benefits. - Google cafeterias and swag were a nice perk until they cut everything with the budget cuts. - Very smart software engineers and research scientists. Some of the best in the world working on AI and ML.

Cons

- Poor work/life balance. I usually worked 60+ hours/week, including weekends, to keep up with the workload. I was also a high-performing employee with exceeding expectations on all of my performance reviews, but still had to work exceedingly long hours in order to keep ahead of things. - Terrible DEI scores. Lower morale reviews by women and underrepresented employees at Google and higher turnover. The company has tried to improve this, but so much more needs to be done. - Executive/Senior management does not take responsibility for their actions and are out of touch with their employees. - Complete chaos inside with simple work being over-processed regarding work, performance reviews, promotions, etc. People are not recognized for their great, hard work, but rather, how well they get along with others and don’t rock the boat. - HR cannot be trusted, does the minimum amount of work required (and this goes all the way to the top), and protects senior management as their #1 priority. There are a few good HR employees, but even they are unhappy in the roles. - Over 12,000 employees were laid off so far in 2023 and many of them were high-performing employees and/or were recently promoted. Why would anyone want to work for a company that they would need to be looking over their shoulder all the time, working hard, just to get laid off because management didn’t do their job with properly planning? This goes all the way up to the CEO and his leadership team. They gave themselves massive long-term equity this year yet they are not held accountable with the company’s problems. They say “I take full accountability”, but it means nothing in the end. I had one of the worst managers of my career at Google . This person was a micromanager to their employees, insecure and only managed up. It was truly amazing that the company kept this VP around with such low PMR and Googlegeist scores. The morale in this organization was terrible. All we did was re-organize all the time. It was exhausting and I recently left for a more normal job where I am recognized for the good work that I’m doing and I’m now making a positive and meaningful difference in advancing tech. The company says that it has “Responsible AI,” but that is just a good marketing statement. Google has a small team that works on Responsible AI, but several of them were impacted with in the 2023 layoffs and the ethics team were let go. Google has a lot of talk around responsible AI, but at the end of the day, the Product Areas (PA’s) can do what they want and the engineers have full reign on decisions - unless Legal has to finally step in.

1.0
Mar 4, 2023
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits and comp are great, people are typically intelligent and dynamic

Cons

Google likes to think it's still a fast moving tech company, but in reality it is political and bloated. The net effect of that is that it has all of the worst of both worlds: working at a start up (custom tools, lack of process, lack of testing) and working at a huge company (bureaucracy). The worst part of Google, though, is the way that it "motivates" employees. The Perf system encourages individual contributions to the point that its hard to be efficient and collaborate. Everyone is doing things just to put it on their Perf. Work life balance is also a joke, no matter how many wellness bonuses they give us. Even though you technically don't need to kill yourself, they use promo to push you to work ridiculous hours. If you're not looking to get promoted (anytime soon), leadership doesn't know how to motivate you otherwise. People who push back on only working 100% of the time are seen as "not a team player". Don't be fooled - free lunches, remote work setups, and massages are just ways to keep you overworking.

3.0
Feb 3, 2023

Pros and Cons as with anything

Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

- Having a good experience at Google depends largely on your team and I had a great team that I was sad to leave. - Good severance when laid off - Amazing benefits while employed, would have made it difficult to leave the company by choice despite being unhappy with a lot of aspects of the work

Cons

Role-specific: - Very bureaucratic + lots of red tape when it comes to hiring. As a result, hiring process takes minimum 3 months (usually closer to 4/5 months) for a req to close and the recruiter really can't control this timing much. This makes it hard to keep candidates happy and difficult to meet quarterly goals since making each hire often takes longer than a quarter. - Some hiring managers can be tough to work or exhibit an elitist attitude; hard to convince some to follow inclusive hiring steps since they will have such a clear idea of the "type" of candidate they want. In general: - You really are just a number while working at Google. It's possible to build strong relationships and not feel this during the day to day, but leadership makes it clear. Examples: Lay off method was cold and not based on employee impact or performance. Leadership will remove benefits without warning, such as being able to work remotely. - Upward and internal mobility is extremely difficult. Promos take years and applying for internal roles is very competitive, so make sure you're prepared to stay in the role you're hired into for 3-4 years before even being looked at for mobility.

Viewing 472 - 474 of 48,528 Reviews

Glassdoor has 70,416 Google reviews submitted anonymously by Google employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Google is right for you.