Getty Images reviews

3.4

52% would recommend to a friend

(662 total reviews)
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Craig Peters

76% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

Getty Images has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 662 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Getty Images employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media & Communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

662 reviews
5.0
May 20, 2019

Great experience

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great company & awesome, respectful managers. The opportunity to work with creative customers and clients who appreciated our superior products. Would return in a heartbeat!

Cons

Getty is more of a creative company & not a tech company - slow to catch up with emerging technology that alienated some customers. They eliminated the independent remote sales team.

5.0
May 16, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Getty Images is a pretty unique and special place to work. Great team to work with that cares for your well being and helps you succeed.

Cons

Could do with more variety of roles to develop your career.

1.0
Apr 26, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There was bubly sparkling water stocked on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

Cons

Absent management: My manager made no effort to go over my job performance or help me with my career development. The times I did have 1:1s scheduled would often end in them missing it and being rescheduled to the next time it was missed. It was clear that I was not valued based on the lack of care demonstrated. I would be shocked if my manager could tell me what I was working on even though we had daily stand ups. There was no knowledge of who upper management was. I cannot tell you who the manager above mine was because I never had any contact with them. Lack of diverse management in engineering: I cannot think of a single women or underrepresented group in the engineering management hierarchy. I can only think of a couple of women in a senior engineering position within AppDev. Toxic relationship between teams: There was very little communication between teams. It could be weeks/months of not hearing for them. The few times there was communication was when someone would say we were doing something the wrong way because they wanted everyone to only do it their way. This usually ended in some type of argument where it had no solution. Product Managers, Product Owners and Dev Managers: What's the difference? PMs manage, POs own, and dev managers do something. I still do not know because they all seem to do something very similar. I was always extremely confused why there was such an overload of PMs/POs. They also do not talk to each other because work often overlapped. The PM/PO could think the work I was doing was great, but the dev manager would have no idea. Review cycles: I never got any feedback on my performance at work. Reviews from coworkers were not a thing. Raises did not happen when I was there, but I read they are usually 3% a year. The technology stack: It still uses Angular 1 written in CoffeeScript. No one is allowed to use ES6/ESNext. Compensation: I was drastically underpaid for Seattle. When the once a year raises happened there would be a recurring excuse of having a low budget or a freeze. They say there is unlimited vacation, but it is not really unlimited. I heard managers limiting unlimited vacation to 24 days, but I cannot confirm.

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Getty Images Response
6y
Thank you for your detailed feedback! We agree that diversity – in gender, experience, and myriad other factors – are highly beneficial to our company, and we have many efforts underway to continue growing the diversity of our team. We cohost events with groups like ADA and Hexagon to ensure diversity in our recruitment efforts; and we are defining Technology Leadership Competencies in partnership with our D&I Program Manager to ensure objective, non-biased characteristics and behaviors are utilized for identifying potential leaders. We hope all of our managers are having regular 1:1s with their directs for career development and providing feedback, but we know these aren’t consistent across all teams – we in HR will try to partner more closely with our people managers to make sure employees are getting the attention and development they need and deserve. When it comes to compensation and benefits, we review our plans regularly and benchmark against local data to offer a robust package that generally gets positive feedback – but not always! This includes our flexible (not unlimited, per se) time off plan, where managers and employees work together to determine a work and vacation schedule that accommodates the needs of the individual, the team, and the company. Our leaders do their best to be available and ensure meaningful communication at all levels, within a collaborative, partnering culture. Strong inter-team relationships are a part of how we deliver daily. Our technology stack is always undergoing review and changes. We are committed to delivering impact for our customers faster and better today than yesterday. But, it is fair to say we are not where we want to be in every interaction, every delivery, and prioritize some improvements over others. We have made changes to make leaders more accessible. Toxic relationships are not common or long tolerated at Getty Images; in fact, people stay here far beyond industry averages because they love their teams, their co-workers and the work they do. We are improving process and technology which can lead to confusion on things like role definition or specific desired tech changes; we need to, and are committed to, do better at change management but will never shy away from changing to make things better. We are always improving and use all feedback, including yours, to inform those choices.
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