LinkedIn reviews

3.8

66% would recommend to a friend

(7,646 total reviews)
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Ryan Roslansky

67% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

LinkedIn has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 7,646 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The LinkedIn employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

8K reviews
3.0
Oct 13, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very eloquent CEO, Powerful Brand, currently very trendy and hype, still great growth of members and customers, Friendly culture polite, respectful and PC, Great benefits (especially 401K) and onsite perks, Great for Millennial to start their career and develop themselves (training and opportunities). Very slick PR, Transparent Communication and respectful collaborative culture on the surface, willing to optimize and scale now. Great potential if it can convert tests in other addressable markets into additional significant revenue streams to their main cash cow Recruiter products. Can either become an even bigger success story in its market regarding world domination and expansion like a Facebook, a Google or Amazon or be the next Twitter or Paypal (Layoffs/Restructure).

Cons

Despite 10 years of existence, still relatively young since IPO a few years ago and still immature regarding consistency, predictability and accountability. Not as great for more senior and experienced profiles as for Millennials to develop themselves (Very limited training and opportunities). Still struggling due to lack of focus and prioritization to grow other total addressable markets like CRM and L&D despite acquisitions and new product initiatives. Still a small town internal mentality, quite passive aggressive, hypocrite culture backstage, where people are very consultative but will do whatever they want afterwards leading to redundancies and complacency, still clinging fiercely and proudly to being scrappy over and over again, which at 300K revenue per employee only they should rethink moving forward. Lots of Operators focused on doing things fast and furious even it means scratching and redoing the same over and over again, but very little strategists -except at the very top- with big picture and collateral damage effect skills willing to do the right things right first time. Paradox of 70% of Individuals having a year or less in the company, among them lots of millennial, meaning talented but young with limited experience and expertise, when 80% of directors and up have been promoted from within over the years so lack of diversity of thoughts, making it quite hard to enter their circle, get alignment on new and/or different ways and often facing a very polite and very politically correct but "been there done that mentality".

1.0
Jun 2, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good food. A lot of time off. Good benefits.

Cons

When Jeff Weiner left the company he took compassionate leadership with him. After Ryan took over we were optimistic for a while, but the next thing you know, people who suck up to their bosses get promoted to senior management, engineers who squeeze the last drop of creativity every day out of themselves get promoted to managers, and now they start squeezing the last drop of creativity every day out of everyone they manage. There is no more compassion in the leadership although they still pretend there is. To be specific: - Work gets scheduled with 5-day work weeks in mind, even though we get many Fridays off. So what do we do? Work on days off to get the work done. Newer engineers are worked to the bone without promotions, refreshes, or any learning opportunities to improve themselves. Senior engineers are occupied too and aren't willing to help guide new members. - Bait and switch. When interviewing candidates, LinkedIn still leads them to believe there's good work-life balance here. But when they enter the company, they're confronted with a completely different reality. - Less pay, but with a good excuses. LinkedIn offers a slightly bigger package than many other companies upfront, but there's typically no annual refreshes. And they think this is okay because there's better "work life balance" (there's not). There are rumors going around about people getting annual refreshes for doing good work. I haven't seen one in person. - The tech stack is very old and poorly documented. You're also not expected to find much help from other engineers. You're on your own. Good luck. - New feature development is pointless. I only use LinkedIn to find jobs. Who cares about other features? Somehow we have hundreds of new features under development at any given time (many of them will be deprecated in a year or two, after their product leads get a promotion). There is no meaning in the work.

1.0
Feb 2, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- free meals - great holiday parties - good 401K match - everyone is young so it is easy to make friends

Cons

- managements and leaders make excuses for racism and sexism in the workplace - hard to get promoted even if you hit your number, most feedback to people are "you are ready it is about timing" even though all managers already know who they are hiring before the interview process - a manager outright said "my team is full of female and I am looking for a man for diversity" and proceed to hire a male that lacks performance - Lots of gossips because everyone hangs out with each other outside of work

Viewing 64 - 66 of 7,646 Reviews

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