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
5.0
Apr 22, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pros: * Good positive culture. There are a good number of bright, passionate, hard working people who want to kick donkey (hey, glassdoor, don't complain about my bad language w/out telling me what words offend your delicate sensibilities) and will work together to do so. * This is silicon valley and work life balance is a struggle at any company but, I think LinkedIn offers a good balance. People work hard because they are passionate. Stepping out in the middle of the day to go to an event at your kid's school is totally fine. Yes, many (most?) people check email or work from home in evenings but leaving work at 5 or 5:30 is also pretty normal. * Some of the older reviews (which I read when I joined) talk about politics and infighting. I think that may have been somewhat accurate when I joined but now I feel that there is genuine good culture of cross team collaboration. Things aren't perfect but they are good. * Professional development. They want their employees to have "transformative experience" in their time at LinkedIn. It's cheesy but that actually has been my experience. I think this is more than lip service. They offer one day courses on things like presentation skills and I recently took a formal (and high quality) 7 day training on a technical topic. * Good management. Lots of complaints about managers in the older reviews. The problem was that the company was growing quickly and promoting from within (which is fine) but not giving these first time managers any training or guidance. I'm not a manager but I'm pretty sure they now take this very seriously and mid and lower level managers are given training and guidance. My manager is a vastly better manager than he was a few years ago, I don't believe he accomplished this w/out support from the company. * Hiring good people. We have high hiring standards both technical and attitude. Some earlier employees were and still are awesome, some not so much. Hiring was revamped/formalized a few years ago and quality of new hires has gone up and been more uniform. * This really is a plus: a couple of people who were awful were discretely let go. This is great for people who aren't awful. I respect and appreciate/management for doing this. No this isn't chilling or scary in any way. It's healthy. Good people attract good people. Bad people repel good people. * Perks. I don't care about this type of stuff much but LinkedIn is next door to google and competing for the same employees so there are a lot of free creature comforts. (Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, snacks, occasional massage, etc.). I'm pretty confident LinkedIn is not as over the top as google, but it is over the top enough (Kombucha on tap). * LinkedIn always says "members first" and they mean it. That said, the data they have access to is impressive. They know more about your company than your company does. They know where everyone at your company worked last. They know about their skills. I can't believe that this data is anywhere near being fully exploited.

Cons

Linkedin is not perfect but I have a hard time coming up with anything serious, but here goes: Not everyone is great. Some early employees who have done quite well financially are not as good as later employees who contribute more. I admit this is petty and irrational but that irritates me a little.

1.0
Sep 11, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Still some good people left (but they are also on their way out) - Good Office perks (lunch, gym) - Immediate peers are respectful and pleasant to work with (but can't say that about my reporting chain)

Cons

- Weak Senior leadership. Current CEO (Ryan R) and his team do not have a strong understanding of market. - Heavy focus on revenue without any care of whats a good customer experience - Feels like Forced layoffs in the form of PIP quotas. no proper Annual comp increase is forcing good people to leave - There has been months of indecisiveness in the form of whether they will layoff, flatten managers. It is causing a lot of angst and stress amongst employees. - The CEO & His team have not addressed any of the tough questions in Company All Hands, scripted answers and heavy lack of transparency. - Amongst management (Dirtector+) there is no regard for good managers - It has become extremely political where Sr. Leadership favors middle managers that has worked with them before. A lot of discrimination during this year calibrations across the company. - Has become a sweatshop without the perks of good compensation

1.0
Jun 29, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

LinkedIn has an awesome brand with the potential to be a great company and a market leader. There are slivers of very smart people. The products are cool.

Cons

For a small company, it's highly political. It contradicts itself on several levels: 1. By claiming to hire the best, but it hires incompetent leaders (especially middle management) and keeps legacy poor performers who are in the wrong roles (a.k.a., the Peter Principle). 2. There is further hypocracy by not abiding by its values. It has become too layered with management that is inaccessible and won't share information. 3. It claims to be a global company, yet it mandates that in order to have any career path, you must be at the HQ in Mountain View. Exceptions are made to certain telecommuters on a hush-hush basis--but not to others--therefore creating unfair practices. As an internet company in this century, I would expect more flexibility in order to retain and attract employees. 4. Benefits are marginal at best for an internet company trying to compete against the big boys. You may as well work at a bank. 5. Wants to be a big player and has the attitude of its neighbor, but it is not implementing practices to compete. 6. It's impossible to have a career path at LinkedIn when they have poor management, poor communication, and oversight of great talent.

Viewing 13 - 15 of 7,646 Reviews

Glassdoor has 9,336 LinkedIn reviews submitted anonymously by LinkedIn employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if LinkedIn is right for you.