Gallup reviews

3.9

72% would recommend to a friend

(1,089 total reviews)
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Jon Clifton

75% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

Gallup has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 1,089 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Gallup employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
Oct 16, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Gallup does a great job investing in good office locations. They have a sprawling campus in Omaha, much like a university and the spacious offices in DC are housed in a historic building. Definitely a pleasant infrastructure to look at.

Cons

The problem is, the people who make up these nice-looking offices are generally some of the lousiest people you will ever encounter in a workplace. They have gotten so sinister that to combat the honest, though negative, reviews you see here on Glassdoor, Gallup management forces associates to write “positive” reviews as part of an employee’s performance plan. Management will likely counter that this is not “forcing” but you better believe if an associate doesn’t write something glowing and upbeat on Glassdoor, they will suffer from vindictive bosses as a result. For those reading these reviews, please skip over the very short, Stepford-like positive reviews where not much of substance is said except for “I’m really fulfilled at Gallup!” Having worked there from the inside for several years, I can assure you that those reviews are phony. Now for a real review. Gallup was once a great brand. Founded by George Gallup in the 1930s, the Gallup Poll had a sterling reputation for being the “gold standard” in polling. When the current CEO Jim Clifton bought the company with his family in the late 1980s, he actually did a great deal of good by expanding the Poll and bringing in consultants to develop work on employee engagement and customer engagement. These “knowledge centers” made Gallup very profitable for a good 20 years or so. Sadly, Jim Clifton and his family’s management style, along with minions brought in over the years as “friends of the family,” are what ruined Gallup. Those who developed the scientific research were driven away one by one, due to the short-sighted and obnoxious ways the company leaders ran things, and those in charge of the Gallup Poll stopped innovating. The Poll went from being the gold standard to getting a few electoral cycles wrong. Famously, the polling unit bungled the 2012 presidential race and that’s what caused Gallup to get out of presidential polling and to severely curtail their polling in general. I was there to witness all this, and it was devastating. If a company hires Gallup because of its allegedly accurate polling and then Gallup stops doing polling because it internally doesn’t have confidence in its own pollsters, then you have a real problem. Watching Gallup leave polling, and not just for the presidency, must be making George Gallup turn over in his grave. Add to that struggles with the US government, where Gallup had to pay a $10 million fine and agree to be monitored for several years, and it’s an uncomfortable place to do business. What do you have left? The touchy-feely thing called “Strengths Finder,” which is light years away from what Gallup was founded on and even far away from the glory years of employee and customer engagement. Strengths Finder is the pet passion of the CEO, but it lacks any kind of scientific rigor or discipline and is more equivalent to studying your horoscope or astrology. It’s not “real,” but it does make people feel good. Back to the people at Gallup. There are some good associates there for sure. But I’ve never seen such a culture of nastiness before anywhere. Gallup leaders relish gossip and internal politics. Top leaders would say they are developing you at Gallup but then if the family decides they don’t like you, you will be abandoned in a heartbeat. They say when they hire you, “let’s change the world” but almost immediately you are left to fend for yourself, with no support, and you never come close to changing anything, much less the world. Furthermore, I’ve never seen a place where people nurture personal vendettas and grudges for so long, holding onto their angst toward fellow employees and delighting in punishing them if they get the chance. Yes, it is that bad. After a while I concluded all my job was about engaging in office political skirmishes. With weak leadership at the top, a landscape of not-very-bright but shrewd managers have popped up, especially in Washington, and have created this toxic culture where no one has incentive to work hard or stay very long. There is more longevity in Omaha because Gallup is a big employer and there isn’t the multitude of employers like in the bigger cities. But in Washington, the turnover is legion as the worst people are promoted and make the day to day miserable for those foolish enough to sign on there.

1.0
Dec 11, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Experience for your resume, and getting to offer at least some support to the people you manage through treating them respectfully and as people (even though this sometimes comes at a high cost)

Cons

Hostile work environment, fear of losing job, working 70 hours/week, "professional" co-workers and supervisors more concerned about drinking and fashion than their jobs, seeing workers below you treated poorly, being asked to do things that were just bordering illegal (like telling people not to take their breaks because they would get paid less, being pressured to not hire pregnant women, hiring based on race, etc.), very little support, looked down on for wanting a family life or balance, having middle aged men with no families get special treatment, having confidential information shared about others with me that should not have been, being told to work ten additional weekend hours on Friday, yelling during manager meetings, and much, much more. The interviewing department probably is the worst. Most of the managers I worked with while I was there were on anti-depressants, on anti-anxiety medications, had stomach ulcers or other stress-related illnesses, etc. I was a manager, but I believe the interviewers have it even worse.

1.0
Jun 6, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice campus, Nice office space, Good Cafeteria and meeting rooms, equipment

Cons

I witnessed many unusual things on the software side that raises anyone's eyebrows. Since the very start I used to see at least few leads inside their office throwing fits, slamming desks, angry and cursing at things going down or someone on the chat. It seemed also very usual for people who have been there long to become enraged in meetings or in one on one discussion from time to time if someone didn't meet deadlines or if someone questioned or if the team or themselves got bad rating. Email shaming others while only complementing those who recorded ridiculous after hours and being passive aggressive with someone that didn't was normal and picked by aspiring developers that followed along. These were the Bullies and there were bigger Bullies that backed them all the time and as it turned out they were even more masterful at these kind of behavior. There could be an argument over which leadership was best at it but GAR and GCP leaderships can be easily voted as taking the top spots. 90 percent of what they call go-tos that a developer reported to were Women. (Not judging, just plain observation to explain the story here) but I never saw men lasting longer in those positions or may be most were not seen fit for being go-tos as Gallup had opinionated classification as which sex/strength/horoscope fits a particular role. They appeared very nice but also were so ignorant about anything technical it made you question how they became a technical manager. If you talked about your problems related to your everyday technical work everything would go over their head and you still got a smile at the end as if trying to mean "oh you are so cute". It also turned out they only acted 100 percent on what the bullies told them. eg. Not allowing to take time off etc and other dirty things that bullies couldn't handle it smoothly and required softer way to say tougher things. Then there's Fairy God mother whom everyone appeared scared. I also came to know much later that there was also family ties among some of them, some were very close, others just close relatives. Anytime it came to God Mother's ears that any sort of deadline is missed, there would be chains of email back and forth explaining why without God mother even asking anything. Most of the deadlines were for SAME APPLICATION WRITTEN OVER AND OVER AGAIN. The worst you are treated is when you leave the company. You are asked to leave immediately pay checks cut. Even if you happened to see them outside later they are still bitter about it. They seem to forget that life is short and it's a small world and however you treated anyone saying a good bye will be remembered by all forever. Bottom line, software side felt like a mental hospital where one can easily loose their sanity.

Viewing 19 - 21 of 1,089 Reviews

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