Wiley reviews

3.6

64% would recommend to a friend

(2,181 total reviews)

Matthew Kissner

58% approve of CEO

43% positive business outlook

Wiley has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 2,181 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
2.0
Feb 13, 2017
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Wiley's legacy of centuries of publishing languor has left a a relaxed - some would say too relaxed - attitude to targets which makes it a nice place to work if you are hoping to stay unnoticed. The staff environment is pleasant enough and it has an old-fashioned charm. It still clings to the idea that publishing should be an ecumenical and intellectual industry far from the hullaballoo of the modern world. Good food and no insistence on watching the clock beyond the hours set by your contract. Great for workers with young families.

Cons

Where to begin? Decades of neglect have left workers with at least three legacy CRMs all providing conflicting information about customers' billing details, and if a customer calls, staff recoil in terror as they know it will take a day of sifting through archival notes on a greenscreen monitor to find out what has happened to their journal. There has been no attempt to modernise the systems or the working environment, and training for new staff members emphasises competence on 1980s systems that are no longer relevant, while ignoring newer developments. It takes at least two years to know where all the files have been stuffed, while promotion is glacial - even for newcomers who have worked in the industry before, they can expect to wait two or more years on a pitiful salary before starting a slow grind toward middle management. All too often the upper management appears to be concerned with "big concepts" and wishful managerial guff (such as imploring their staff to "Take a great leap forward") without actually providing the systems that are so badly needed to achieve this. The information overload for new starters is excessive - several have quit within days of starting once they see how many contradictions and exceptions they are supposed to remember. This is exacerbated by a tendency for team leaders to discourage questions, and a culture of small teams who don't socialise means that you can easily pass two years without knowing many of the names of your co-workers. Most people are simply treading water until they can move on to a better-paid position.

1.0
Nov 3, 2016

Avoid at all cossts

Anonymous employee
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Great colleagues, good work life balance and paid time off

Cons

Total mess and a lesson in how to completely mismanage a company in a time of transition. Can't see it staying in business. Everyone is either being laid off or leaving on their own accord because the office politics and morale is so, so bad. And for all those people reading this who chock this up to a bitter ex-employee ... just wait, the tide isn't turning. It's too late.

1.0
Nov 2, 2016

Not a great place to work.

Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

A reasonable amount of paid time off.

Cons

HR is seriously disorganized and does not value people. Reorganization is constant. Management does not listen to the people on the ground doing the work. Communication is poor, particularly in the technology organization. Many in upper level management worry only about their own titles and corporate ladder climbing and are - by and large - dishonest and belittling to staff. Avoid this place if at all possible.

Viewing 211 - 213 of 2,181 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,425 Wiley reviews submitted anonymously by Wiley employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Wiley is right for you.