Gartner reviews

3.8

71% would recommend to a friend

(9,345 total reviews)
avatar

Gene Hall

78% approve of CEO

54% positive business outlook

Gartner has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 9,345 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Gartner employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

9K reviews
3.0
Aug 29, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Great perks- car details onsite, free food end of quarter, we used to have complimentary valet -Very work hard play hard -Winner Circle is a great experience if you can hit it -Very reputable company that sets you up for career -Training is some of the best you’ll find -Products, while very expensive, genuinely can help the client when you know how to properly align resources to them

Cons

Where do I begin? They promote people into management before they are ready since the culture is 2 years until either promotion or you leave. This causes there to be awful and clueless management and VPs. Some aren’t bad, but if you’re unlucky enough to get aligned to one of the bad ones, it’s awful. Management and VPs don’t actually care about you or your success. You’re purely a number here. There once was a bench of about 100 college grads waiting to replace you. If you don’t perform, you’re out. Even if you perform, you’re jobs never safe. People hit winners circle and still get let go for performance. Because you’re just a number and there’s that 2 year culture I mentioned before, turnover is EXTREMELY HIGH. You’re not even guaranteed to make it through training after they relocate you. Many people don’t last a year. Even fewer make it two full years. They force you into either the management track or BD track, but don’t often support you when you want to make a horizontal move. You have to resign your current role before even applying elsewhere in the company. There are so many sales people the territories keep shrinking and you often get completely useless states. Teams fight over prospects. You’re also forced to sell sell sell and it makes building a relationship with the client somewhat difficult. Clients often tell you to stop trying to sell them off cycle because it annoys them so much. Gartner is VERY cliquey. You live, eat, work, and play with Gartner people, so everyone knows everyone, for better or for worse. Also, Gartner often acts as a dating service, as many of those who work there end up dating or getting married to coworkers. Why did I leave? Management. I was bullied and harassed by those I reported directly to and HR was their buddy, so I had no one to turn to. People on my team couldn’t be trusted to not spill things directly back to management either. I was once very happy at Gartner. I loved my job, many of the people I worked with, and overall it is a great company. But sometimes you’re dealt a bad territory, a bad manager, and a bad VP, and it sets you up for a lot of stress and a lot of failure.

2.0
Jan 23, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Company culture when I started in 2017 was fun, lively, social, and felt like a family. Some of the people still there (albeit not many left), still have these values. - Salary is decent if you do the minimum to keep your job (work 35ish hours per week). - If you have the chance to talk on research calls, you can learn a lot and get good experience.

Cons

Where to begin... the biggest negative I have is overall culture. Culture tanked in 2018. This can be attributed to a few things. 1) Failure to promote internally. I can count at least 10 times where a person worthy of promotion due to their hard work and impact on members was passed up for an external hire. And to make it worse, the person passed up for promotion HAD TO TRAIN the external hire, who can't actually be effective at the job until at least 6-9 months. 2) Hiring people that did not fit the culture of the company. Gartner switched to a big open-floor plan in the Rosslyn building, which is great if you like your coworkers and can work with noise. Not great if you do not like people talking on the phone for calls or chatting with people on their teams. A few hires were very anti-talking, causing the people around them to stop talking and basically make the place seem like high school detention. Fun events such as happy hour and team lunches went away almost entirely due to these people that seemingly did not want to be around others. 3) Practice leadership is extremely disconnected from the people who actually write the research. They are unfamiliar with how long tasks take, and refuse to take any action even when employees bring up issues in 1 on 1 meetings. On top of this, managers will promise work that lower level employees have to do, without knowing at all how much time things take. This wouldn't be an issue if compensation was higher, but it's not. This is not an Accenture or BCG, so stop trying to get that level of work out of your employees when you pay 30% less. There is a reason many good people leave to go work across the street at Deloitte - same level of expected work, but more pay. 4) Failure to compensate good talent. Gartner has lost a ton of good people over the last 6 months, primarily because they were overworked, underappreciated and under-compensated. Management seemed to have criteria for promotion that they did not share with lower level employees, making it a crap-shoot on whether or not you would get a promotion. There is a different timeline depending on what practice you work in for when you can be promoted – which is just silly. Promote people that can do the job – not that have been there long. That makes no sense. Why have your best talent doing work that an intern can do? On top of that, being promoted requires your manager to basically defend you against any critics, which scares many managers off from trying to promote you. 5) Unequal compensation. This is sort of an add-on to above, but you can show up at 9am, take an hour lunch, and leave at 5pm and you will get compensated the exact same as someone that comes in at 7:45am, works through lunch, takes on extra tasks, and stays late. Clearly one of these employees tries harder and cares more about their impact - yet management does not recognize this. Again, adds to the frustration and takes away any motivation to work hard or go the extra mile. 6) Silly working from home policies. When I started, my first manager (I had 3 in 2 years...) told me working from home is completely okay as long as I get my work done. What he/she did not tell me is not all managers have the same policy. My second manager told me not to work from home because "I needed to be in the office to get my work done". I get it - a lot of older people still think that if you are not at work, you are not working. Wake up. It's 2019, and working from home has so many positives. For starters, the company wouldn't have to spend millions each year on rent for that massive building. Many people are also more productive from home. It's easier to work without distractions, and I end up actually working more since I am way more comfortable. This isn't just a Gartner problem, but they can be a part of the solution. The bigger issue is inconsistent standards which managers need to discuss and figure out.

1.0
May 28, 2018

Double digit growth at all costs........

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

flexible work hours and work from home - though good luck ever working an 8 hour day again

Cons

in the 5 years i have been with the company it has turned into a sweat shop. All senior leadership care about are metrics, and stock price. To the point where morale is tanking, people are burning out, and its really turning into a negative culture - this will directly impact our clients over time. Unhappy employees = unhappy customers.

Viewing 49 - 51 of 9,345 Reviews

Glassdoor has 10,187 Gartner reviews submitted anonymously by Gartner employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Gartner is right for you.