Wiley reviews

3.6

65% would recommend to a friend

(2,179 total reviews)

Matthew Kissner

60% approve of CEO

43% positive business outlook

Wiley has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 2,179 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Wiley employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Mídia e comunicação industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
Nov 6, 2017
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits and salary, if you're one of those people willing to sell your self-worth for those things.

Cons

Literally everything. Everyone is in the same boat of misery and exhaustion of being overworked, underappreciated, and micromanaged, yet having an opinion will get you fired. There is no room to grow in the company unless you are a male, preferably without children. The jobs themselves require little talent and have become automated and scripted, much like that of a for-profit environment which Deltak used to pridefully rise above. I have never seen a company turn so quickly with such a lack of loyalty to follow suit with the absurd changed.

1.0
Oct 9, 2016

No idea how it stays in business....

Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

-Good work/life balance (most people leave by 4:30 PM every day, many leave earlier and/or work from home a few days a week) -Several kind and friendly co-workers -Good benefits (though most of their new hires are through a temp agency, so of course these benefits won’t apply) -Downtown Hoboken (where HQ is located) is a great area for food, drinking, shopping, etc

Cons

While upper management may be nice, they are horribly inept at their actual jobs. They lack an understanding of how to delegate tasks, make decisions,are terrible at communication, and are horribly out of touch with publishing and how a business ought to be run. Within my first few days, I was told that, over the last few years, Wiley has undergone frequent layoffs and reorganizations (on a daily basis, 9/10 Wiley employees whom you may ask a question to- since their job title implies they should know the answer- will say something akin to: “actually, during the reorg I was moved over here so I’m just learning how this works myself”; you will then be passed on to another person who is equally inexperienced....and so on and so forth). While these reorganizations are obviously a serious problem, upper management seems to think it’s all a big joke. Among other things, I was laughingly told that “it [the reorg] has been happening every year and will keep happening” and that “you and others [new employees] have walked into a mess.” In other words, everyone- especially those who are in a position to make a difference at the company- display an “I know this sucks and isn’t the way it should be, but it’s just how it is so oh well haha”-type attitude. Additionally, new hires are given little to no training whatsoever; if you are given any training, don’t expect any help from your direct manager with understanding any of the outdated online systems as- again, due to the constant reorgs- he/she probably doesn’t know how they work either. Wiley is currently, constantly claiming that it wants to be digital-focused and progressive company but has no idea how to go about this. Case in point: higher ups will SAY in meetings that we “need to move forward”, make the “best use” of everyone’s time, yet their actions show otherwise. Assistants and coordinators, in particular, are constantly made to do outdated tasks and produce documents that authors, sales reps, etc haven’t had use for in years either because a) they’re used to it b) 1 out of 1000+ authors or reps asked for it; furthermore, they are told to do one thing one day, only for it to be changed within hours....and then changed back again.. Wiley, you cannot move forward if you’re constantly doing archaic practices. Wiley, you cannot make every single author and rep happy and thus cannot do everything that every single person asks.Wiley, you cannot simply obsess over what every other publishing company is doing and steal their ideas (which you fail to execute anyway). Wiley, you SHOULD (but fail) to respect your employees and follow through on your ideas.

2.0
Aug 19, 2016
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Good work life balance (depending on your manager) Nice amount of PTO for all levels. The Hoboken office is going through a transformation to make it much more open which will encourage more collaboration and communication.

Cons

Constant change and turnover. Not a clear career path and very little room for growth. The environment as it stands now is dull and colleagues reflect that. Most people are overworked and stressed and just can't wait to leave at the end of the day. Processes make doing business slow. Frustrated customers, frustrated employees. I've seen interns turn from bright-eyed and bushy tailed to a walking zombie within days if not weeks. Salaries could be higher for a billion dollar company. There are a select number of employees that keep getting promoted (it's all about who you know and who likes you around here) while others work hard and get very little reward or recognition. No one is happy for some reason or another and if they aren't looking for jobs because they are being laid off, then they are looking because they want to get the heck out of here and on to more exciting opportunities.

Viewing 82 - 84 of 2,179 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,423 Wiley reviews submitted anonymously by Wiley employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Wiley is right for you.