Procter & Gamble reviews

4.1

81% would recommend to a friend

(14,300 total reviews)
avatar

Jon R. Moeller

83% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

Procter & Gamble has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 14,300 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Procter & Gamble employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

14K reviews
2.0
Jan 11, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pay is great for the level of expectations of the work delivered. The benefits in sales are nice but sometimes not necessary considering other company's benefit packages. The people are friendly and mostly from the midwest. On some teams within sales, working from home is standard.

Cons

P&G's big mantra is that "people" are the greatest asset. While this is nice and all, the company does not consistently maintain this philosophy throughout the organization or through all levels. The hierarchy system is institutionalized as a way of life - ie, you can get your hand slapped for emailing your boss' boss directly - where managers at each level are not to be questioned or challenged. The onus is on the employee to manage their managers regardless of the managers competence, engagement in developing the employee, or experience. I had 5 different managers at P&G and only 1 of them was decent. Because P&G does not have a culture that questions authority and does not hold people accountable as a result, mediocrity is the new bar that is set and continuously lowered as this becomes more ingrained into the culture. Blatant policy violations, overspends, etc are covered up and individuals responsible are given the same high praise as others who exceed expectations and over deliver. It's an incredibly de-motivating experience - and the lack of accountability creates this penetrating sense of job security so no matter how mediocre a person, they know they will always have a safe place in the company. P&G also has extremely limited to no transparency regarding topics like career planning, where you move, what role you do, and what function you work in regardless of strengths or passions. The decisions are made behind a curtain and planned out for you. I moved three times in 5 years - each time not one person took into account my feedback on preferences or role preferences. The sales culture is one of intensive brain washing - everyone drinks the kool aid and cannot imagine leaving the company despite high levels of dissatisfaction. Few do. I am one and I am happier than ever. It is one professional decision I will never regret.

1.0
Dec 8, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will have a job. There are some nice people to work with that you will meet at PG. You can have a long and safe career with PG if you are willing to sacrifice everything but your job. Ability ot travel world wide if you like to.

Cons

Company culture is extreme and there is no room for creativity. You will not be promoted unless you are a "yes" man. You must adhere to the "standards" at all costs even if you can find a better way to do something. No respect for technology or peoples abilities to grow and learn. IF you work for PG too long you will have no skills to work for another company. A company of managers and delegators and no one doing anything but paperwork.

2.0
Jul 8, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-People are incredibly smart and capable -Money is good, especially for the location -If you as a person fit the culture (are a Type A person who is very loyal to the company) you’ll love it

Cons

COMPANY CULTURE: As someone who’s worked other places, this is the worst culture I’ve ever seen. It’s a loud, vocal, incredibly Type A place to the point of being toxic. Further, speaking plain English isn’t a thing - you’re literally playing corporate buzzword bingo every day and there are so many acronyms that the company published a dictionary/translation guide. Finally, there is this incredibly odd “company man” culture where everyone thinks that P&G is the greatest place in the world, that we’re the most prestigious company ever, and that your only hope of having a successful career is to be here (i.e. P&G is superior to Google and McKinsey, why would you ever leave?). The “drinking the kool-aid” is over the top and the inflated sense of the company that people have is not based in reality. -LOCATION. It’s Ohio, there’s no escaping that. 100% remote isn’t a thing here, and it’s made clear that to advance you must be in Ohio. This is why most of their college recruiting is at Midwest schools: it’s tough to convince people who know what’s out there to give it up and come to Cincy. -JOB DUTIES: my job’s day-to-day looked nothing like what the job title suggests, what was written in the job description, or what was described during the interview process. Be prepared for a possible bait-and-switch scenario.

Viewing 25 - 27 of 14,300 Reviews

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