Getty Images reviews

3.4

52% would recommend to a friend

(661 total reviews)
avatar

Craig Peters

76% approve of CEO

39% positive business outlook

Getty Images has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 661 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

661 reviews
3.0
Jan 10, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

decent pay, super casual dress environment

Cons

middle management is useless, doesn't really grasp what their staff do, non-technical mgmt in charge of technical departments, ultra-silo'd, cranky vp with a napoleon complex. Not solutions-oriented.

1.0
Mar 17, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people are generally nice, the benefits are good. You can have a good work-life balance working for this company.

Cons

The company is for sale and most teams and resources are focused on reducing operational costs to make the bottom line look better to potential buyers. Many long-time employees have been let go, entire teams are being outsourced. There is no longer any pride or upside to working at this company, the most talented people have already left and there is an ongoing exodus of the people that remain. This is a dead end career for all but the senior managers that own stock and stand to cash out when the company is bought or goes public. It would be a big mistake to think you can advance your career at Getty Images in Seattle.

1.0
May 8, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Getty Images is the leader in the industry. They have developed technology and been on the cutting edge for their customers while offering a sound product and continually keeping way ahead of the competition. As of 2008, the diverse products and services within the company yield many opportunities for different skill sets to succeed. Their benefits package is encouragable and the culture operates in a corporate world w/o imposing a corporate vibe on employees. In many ways, they promote teamwork and leverage their position as industry leader to positively impact client workflow. This product will always have a home. The majority of businesses out there, using photography and/or digital media services, are not setup to operate within and exclusive from an agency like Getty Images. These companies will always rely on this service to be outsourced...and if you're an established brand it makes more sense to align yourself with another top performing brand than to go "sub-par" just to cut costs. In this concept, there is job security, value and reliability.

Cons

The offices and work space are, for the most part, not attractive to entertaining clients or holding client meetings. They are not amenable and optimal to produce a positive work environment. Directors and VP's are behind closed doors and rarely touch the staff while Managers are amongst the employees more to take the temperature of the 'situation' than to provide guidance. As a manager, you are not in a position to help your team grow. Your direct reports are put under as much paperwork as the manager and the admin work has only grown over the last few years - regardless of how much is said around adding personnel. The first few sentences in the employee manual states how important the "employee" is to the company. Noble statement, however, when planning new initiatives or rolling out new products/ services - the last person in the loop [and the ppl with the most valued feedback] is the employee. Our Leadership Principles are clearly available for all to ahere to and all employees are annually rated against them...who is monitoring Management on these Principles? Starting at the manager position and working your way up the chain, the accountability becomes less and less to "Leading" the team and striving to live by these Principles. Calling out your boss is 'career suicide' but your success is deemed to be the success of your boss when looked at from above. In most cases, the managers and VP's have virtually nothing to do with the sales revenue. Watching the daily revenue tracker to then crack the whip when things are tight OR 'send an email' when things are looking good is not the way to run a sales team. Separate issue: Most executives these days live and die by email....not good. Productive to a point, but when you're the leader in your industry - "you" should be able to get off email and work more intimately with your employees and your customers. Training: Getty Images used to have a global learning team dedicated to educating the employees on needful items. It was made up of formal sales employees and these ppl were educated to the workings of the company inside and out. It made sense b/c the ppl pushing the new knowledge on you had a very good idea HOW to dish it, HOW to digest it and WHERE the pitfalls were going to be. No longer. This team was disbanded and recently a new team was put in place with no knowledge of the products, sales cycles, daily hurdles to overcome etc. Not effective.

Viewing 73 - 75 of 661 Reviews

Glassdoor has 817 Getty Images reviews submitted anonymously by Getty Images employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Getty Images is right for you.