A neutral P&G employee - Account Manager Procter & Gamble Employee Review

3.0
Dec 16, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

if you are young when entering the company and have a masters degree and live in Cinci it can be a good career. I am also very happy with my pay and really the advances I have made given my age which for P&G is old. I personally am happy with the benfits packages and the health care plan. Mine is much better than the majority of my friends and family in the workforce at comprable positions in their companies.

Cons

If you enter the company after the age of 40 there is very little advancement. Out in the field, and I did not put my state or city, it is a different picture. Especially if you entered the work force late in life or you are in a channel that is not well respected.In sales the biggest disconnect is the lack of "real life" experience of the leadership teams in the channel. Very few have real sales experience and consequently the same mistakes are repeated time and time again. That is the most frustrating aspect of employment with P&G. Management is so proctorized that they are unable or unwilling to listen to those under them about the "really reallys". Goals are always "stretch goals" because they are unrealistic. I realize every management team makes mistakes. But, as a stock holder it is appalling that management is unable to learn from past mistakes. That is because mistakes are never admitted or passed down for others to learn from and not repeat. I like celebrating accomplishments, but we also need to learn from the past not ignore it to our detriment. Geez look at what is happening with Pringles!!

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5.0
Jun 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great Culture Opportunity to move cross-functionally

Cons

Hard to get into leadership if you don’t start in management

5.0
Jun 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

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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