Uber reviews

3.7

65% would recommend to a friend

(16,230 total reviews)
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Dara Khosrowshahi

70% approve of CEO

53% positive business outlook

Uber has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 16,230 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Uber 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

16K reviews
3.0
Apr 12, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I arrived early enough (2014) to carve out a one-of-a-kind role for myself. Uber was young enough to still truly feel like a startup and for it to attract truly brilliant employees. I was, and still am, inspired by my peers and the approach and speed at which they solve problems.

Cons

No surprises here: Travis. The leadership. Performance. Growth. It's all as bad as it seems, if not worse. The longer you've been there, the more legacy actually can hold you back. The glass ceiling actually feels especially low for women.

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Uber Response
9y
Hi - thanks for taking the time to send this in. If you'd be willing, I'd love to connect confidentially and offline to dig in to some of the cons and advice you mention. Feel free to reach out and we can set up a time to chat: pierce@uber.com.
1.0
Feb 20, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good opportunities to learn Interesting challenges

Cons

No work life balance No diversity No growth opportunities especially for women or minorities Toxic culture

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Uber Response
9y
Thanks for sending in this review. If you'd be willing to chat offline, I'd really like to connect and dig in to your review and find specific ways we can make the experience of working at Uber better for everyone. If you'd be willing, feel free to reach out: pierce@uber.com. Thanks!
2.0
Jun 20, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Successfully sold the ride hailing/sharing story to the world (investors, employees, and public) despite heavy bleeding in revenue and talents recently.

Cons

Business Model The rosy model of transportation revolution only works in limited crowded cities where - People don't own cars - People can't afford parking and live far from underground transportation entrances - Lack of underground transportation systems - People can afford surged prices Or as last mile solution to public transportation system. Big challenges ahead: - Excessive burn rate that requires billions of dollars injection every year - Highly inflated and unsustainable eco-system. Both riders and drivers are lured to systems by promotions, incentives and credits, particularly true in countries supported company's hyped growth - Drivers are paid barely higher than minimum wage given the gas and car ownership cost, large percent drivers leave the platform after a few weeks or months. Constant high cost to recruit new drivers. - Increasing competition from not only tech companies, but also car manufactures, taxi companies. The model may work when autonomous car on road, which eliminates drivers from the ecosystem. At the same time, it will make every car manufacture a competitor. Tesla, VW, Toyota, Audi, GM etc will join Apple, Google, Amazon to fight for market share. The winner would be a tech savvy car maker or a joint venture from a tech giant and car maker. Making autonomous car is a bigger challenge than building a ride sharing platform. Car is commodity, but autonomous car is true innovation. Ride sharing platform is less complicated than many high traffic systems today, the realtime dispatch component is likely be the trickiest, which heavily relies on map and realtime traffic report. Map developer owns the most important ride sharing static (map) and dynamic data (realtime traffic), will eventually rule the ride sharing platform. Uber is ambitious and chose to work on everything in house including autonomous car, map. Progress would be more significant if partner with industry leaders. Uber's NA market is slowing down, China is much smaller than DiDi but bleeding heavily, no sign of relief anytime soon. Culture Toe stepping is encouraged with good intention, but many use it to attack others, there is no team work under unexperienced first line, second line management, managers don't have right judgement and integrity to tell when a stepping is good, when is bad. Surviving first year is hard, particularly reaching to anniversary. You may let go right before your stock vesting date. People work "HARD" to show they are busy, but extremely inefficient from business impact point of view. Tons of reports, charts, but not much truth finding and problem solving. Employee will be trained to become a talker, ppt/report maker, and an attacker to survive. No exit for stock holders, CEO has publicly said to delay IPO as long as possible. Each round of funding dilutes shares.

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Uber Response
9y
Hi - thanks for your detailed and honest feedback of your time here at Uber. You're right, we're tackling a lot, from ride-sharing, to maps, to new products like EATS and RUSH, there are a lot of big, ambitious projects going on. It's these big bold bets that make our work exciting and position us for future success. Meritocracy & toe-stepping is a value of ours that urges employees to know what's right and fight for it, without being a jerk. If you see someone crossing the line, I encourage you to speak up and say something. We all want to fight for what we think is right, but nobody wants to be attacked. Building on that, if you notice consistent inefficient work on your team, let your manager know. Thanks again for your candor. If you ever want to dive deeper into your feedback, feel free to reach out: pierce@uber.com.
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