Wolters Kluwer reviews

3.7

68% would recommend to a friend

(4,075 total reviews)
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Stacey Caywood

85% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

Wolters Kluwer has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 4,075 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Wolters Kluwer 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

4K reviews
1.0
Oct 8, 2025

The More I Remeber, the More I Hate

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Genuinely nice coworkers who are friendly and seem to want you to succeed. But I might have gotten lucky, for the first tine in my life, and got in with a good group

Cons

Managers are the worst (especially anyone director level and above) I have ever had; at best they have no clue how to be a manager or boss or leader or even the world around them and if they were turkeys they would drowned in the rain; at worst they lie, gaslight, and are generally duplicitous in nature; on average they activity hate you just for existing. If they ask for your advice or input on a topic as a subject matter expert they will not listen or take your advice in any way shape or form, and just do what they wanted to do to begin with. They live their whole life's in meetings and expect you to drop everything you are doing to go to the meetings they schedule you for a hour before the meeting time; most directors and above don't live in your time zone and don't understand how lunch breaks work. I have 2 stories where VPs and directors treat everyone below them as slaves but they are rather specific to me and could be identifiable, during my termination meeting I was lowkey threatened and they have plausible deniabily to gaslight me if I did report it. In my 5 years on the job I had 3 direct managers and 2 directors all changed bc some VP must have been having an inconvenient day. The average toddler has more emotional maturity then many of these directors and VPs do. Offices are normally ghost towns, even thou directors (and above) expect everyone back in the office 4 times a week, all the while never stepping foot in the office even if they live 5 blocks away. I asked for training in the newest craze going around with the upper managers and I spent 3 months being told by the team that handles all training that they dont do training, then asking people in my groups who gave them the training to be told it was the people I first talked to, then showing proof they manage the training and then being told no they actually don't manage the training; and eventually I just gave up. Don't expect training of any kind, your best bet is to get into one of the hidden teams chats where others in your level can collab in peace away from upper management. Anyone who says there is work life balance here, lives only to work. I have gotten calls at the last second of the day for jobs that take 2 hours and have to be done before start of day (happens once to twice a week). Rarely get a chance to take PTO; the one time I finally got to take time off, I get called back in so the director could tell me (out of the blue) that the day was my last day as I was being laid off and that my whole team (along with other teams, all over 40 with a combine service time of 60+ years) was being outsourced to India. The whole time she had a grin on her face like a kid on Christmas who just got everything they wanted. After 5 (near 6) years of service I was outsourced after being specifically head hunted to join the organization to join. Average salary raise is 1-2% a year, and the Directors and VPs act like that's nearly too much to give the workers. Employee reviews are a joke. Work 80+ hrs in one week? Expect 3 out 5 star review. Make the company 50million dollars? 3 out of 5.

2.0
Nov 15, 2019

Overbearing push of disruptive, duplicative work from execs in HQ and NY

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

more flexibility for work from home than expected some nice people

Cons

Taskforces from hell, it's a super fragmented, decentralized org trying to be a nimble high performing engine killing people including leaders in the middle. The desperation for change combined with an utter disregard and support for people who are either trying to lead the change or absorb it, is profound. HR and alphen need to step up and fix the mess being created.

1.0
Aug 17, 2019

Only for workaholics. Families and personal life will suffer.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of room for advancement, great benefits. If you are young and/or single, this could be a great opportunity.

Cons

Horrible culture. Employees are just numbers on a spreadsheet. Extremely long hours. Unrealistic goals (if they are even clear), and they only care about the bottom line. There is no concern given for the greater good of the employees and the long-term future of the company. Executive leadership is purely concerned with getting their very large bonuses for that year. It is stereotypical "big corporate".

Viewing 67 - 69 of 4,075 Reviews

Glassdoor has 4,960 Wolters Kluwer reviews submitted anonymously by Wolters Kluwer employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Wolters Kluwer is right for you.