CoStar Group reviews

2.7

34% would recommend to a friend

(3,014 total reviews)
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Andrew C. Florance

32% approve of CEO

37% positive business outlook

CoStar Group has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 3,014 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The CoStar Group employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Real Estate industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
1.0
Aug 28, 2017

Horrible Schoolyard

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great location. The office is located in a beautiful building in Irvine.

Cons

Management listens to favorites only. No team effort whatsoever. If you do not follow the "Seniors," you are cast as an incompetent and are never listened. Even the management takes the "favorites" side to make sure that the "sheeps" follow the "Costar" way. No leadership from management. Everyone is for him/herself. Beware!!! No career opportunities at all. Management doesn't care about employees' growth. They care about themselves. P.S. The company is so cheap that they make you pay for parking.

1.0
May 4, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are virtually no upsides to the actual work you do at this company. Perhaps, if you work as a Research Associate here, after knowing the epitome of awfulness, your future decision-making will be better going forward.

Cons

The word ‘research’ should not be in the job title. It does not matter what industry this is – you are dealing with individual data points and have absolutely no association with a larger picture of real estate or markets. Your ‘research’ mostly includes google, maybe a couple government websites, and cross-referencing individual data points on our own websites. If you ever took a research methods class you will quickly learn that the definition of research at CoStar greatly differs from what you had learned it to be. And primarily, you are calling, calling, calling, calling – calling those who mostly have better things to do. And since your training involves little more than basic knowledge of anything in the industry, and you are used to being belittled on the phone, you come off as a scared buffoon. You will learn very (very) rudimentary basics of commercial real estate – and that is where the resume builders end. As we were explained to after a company wide survey (the results of which made it vividly clear that 1. No Research Associate believes there is any career growth and 2. Senior Management is awful), you learning new skills (SQL, Excel, Economics/Finance of RE) is not a business need. Although this may be true, people should not be treated as cattle. As with many businesses, concessions are made to employees to foster happiness. And I’m not talking about money – I’m referring to helping people develop careers. Further, is it not a smart business decision to maximize the knowledge of your employees? Every tweak to the research process introduces a new mind-numbing task. Research Associates are prevented from learning any new skills or learning about anything in their market. Literally, your job is data entry, following scripts, and smiling – and I can’t emphasize this last point enough. Leadership is synonymous with the perception of an uppity-up personality. Include smiles, flamboyant language in your e-mails, drink-kool-aid, and tell everyone you had the most relaxing weekend (but it was too short, though!!), and you are on your way to Research Associate II! You can taste the repressed emotions on your tongue; the attuned psychologist would have a field day here. Let’s dive into the culture of anti-intellectualism, shall we? Any criticisms of the research process are greeted with some pre-packaged platitude. For instance, if you state that an over-emphasis on one metric is side-lining work on a different metric, a common rebuttal is, “Just try a little harder.” Or perhaps, “Start working right away; the early bird gets the worm!” You will NEVER see actual statistics with SOUND methodology that relate the best research practices. Perhaps because what you do here is not research. At least in the military you understand that there is some kind of purpose behind what you do.  I love the tag-line of CoStar’s website: “Knowledge Market.” You have to be kidding me. I’ll give you a perfect example to illustrate my concerns with this tag-line: About two years ago CoStar released a new analytical product that gave insights into CRE micro-markets. Research MANAGERS were responsible for initial edits of this content. They were only the initial editors for little over a few months. Why?  The Research Managers had no idea what was actually happening in their markets (DC, NY, Baltimore) and could offer no valuable feedback. The products were horrendous and apparently upper management was naïve enough to think that Research Managers are more than glorified cheerleaders. The Research Manager’s day consists of sending out e-mails such as “this guy has 15 calls already! Who can catch him?!” I am not joking. That is actually the childish motivating tactic used by most managers at the DC Center. That and standing up and bellowing, "kind of quiet in here!" Meaning you should pick up your phone and aimlessly call admins. Kind of similar to a 3rd grade classroom when the teacher walks in and says, "why is it so loud in here?" as a way of getting the room to quiet. Or other emails Managers send out telling you to not text while working -- I haven't had this kind of discussion since high school. You work a kind-of-job. You have no power, real responsibility, and are, at best, a half-realized supplement to any commercial real estate professional. Lets end this review off by calling you what you really are – a secretary’s secretary. Real Estate Companies hire secretaries to deal with you. 90% of your client’s needs is extraordinarily rudimentary -- basic data points that 3rd graders can communicate to you. However, management will tell you that what you do is ‘so complex’ and brokers ‘need’ to speak with you.' False. And further, when brokers tell you that their firm has hired someone to deal with you and they don’t have time for you, and you tell your manager this, you will get the hose again. The CoStar responses on Glassdoor have been a real treat. “CoStar is fast-paced!” or “We’re constantly changing to make things better!” No. CoStar research is an impetuous and childish institution. If you loath creativity, are motivated by childish motivation tactics, and are okay with being a pawn – CoStar Research is the cubicle for you! Apply Today!

3.0
Feb 9, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

We are paid very, very well. The benefits are also top notch. The office has a great view. The individuals you work with really care about their job, for the most part. The research managers are great (this does not apply to upper management).

Cons

As everyone who has given a review has already said, the metrics are not based in reality. A researcher has to make a certain number of calls, starting first thing in the morning, while ignoring client requests, portfolio maintenance, and everything that the company claims to sell. Though you are allowed to clock out (so that your lack of time on the phone doesn't hurt your metrics) for larger projects, there is not enough time in the day to do the amount of work that upper management wants done. Recent metric changes have impacted the quality of data coming out of the company to the point where I do not see how it's sustainable without customers catching on. Branding is flat across the board, so that researchers are branding with the same script to customers who have been with the company for years and building owners in the middle of nowhere who don't have an email address let alone a knowledge of CoStar. On top of metrics researchers receive call evaluations which are entirely based on this branding. There is no relationship building in this job. It's just calls. Don't let them tell you it's "all about balance". It's all about calls (which most of the bigger clients hate anyways and you'll only talk to admins). I have watched multiple, more senior, researchers leave the office in tears. The stress is so intense it's a good thing we have great health benefits.

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CoStar Group Response
9y
Thanks for leaving a review. Our metrics are carefully tailored to help drive the quality of research forward, help researchers improve and drive value for our clients. The productivity in Research has been climbing and a large percentage of Researchers in all centers are achieving the daily metrics. The essential work that research does drives CoStar forward and that’s why we’re laser-focused on it. The CoStar data obtained by Research is our critical differentiator from our competitors and what clients are paying for.
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Glassdoor has 3,106 CoStar Group reviews submitted anonymously by CoStar Group employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if CoStar Group is right for you.