Zillow reviews

3.4

54% would recommend to a friend

(2,504 total reviews)
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Jeremy Wacksman

57% approve of CEO

49% positive business outlook

Zillow has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 2,504 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Zillow 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

3K reviews
2.0
Apr 8, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

When I joined, Zillow really was one of the Best Places to Work. I liked my managers, co-workers, and the many fun Zillow traditions. I thought that Zillow did a good job providing good perks and useful benefits while avoiding a lot of frivolous nonsense. When they went all-remote in 2020, the company really did do as good a job as could be hoped for managing that transition and being supportive of people's physical and mental needs.

Cons

I think it was very clear to anyone who interacted with, like, real customers that Zillow Offers was a terrible program from the start, that antagonized and annoyed users, and had very little potential. It was pure glistening hubris in the C-suite that pretended it was otherwise. But worse was the creeping stagnation that consumed the whole rest of the company. So many multi-year "platform rewrites", hair-splitting A/B tests and an absolutely pervasive sense that no one knew what they should do or how to get it done. The "old" businesses of rentals and forsale listings just chugged along doing *nothing* for years, honestly YEARS. Look at zillow.com from two years ago, there's been no real improvements. People were obsessed with Redfin, but it was like they were looking through a window at a puppy they could never hope to snuggle. A lot of senior managers and leaders are still around from the old easy money days, and there's a common feeling they're just protecting their turf and not wanting to rock the boat. These guys (and all are guys, to be clear) shuffle a lot of middle managers around, debate the meaning of words in OKRs, all the usual corporate theatrics. But so little was actually accomplished, so so little. It's just a regular big dumb company now I guess.

2.0
Jan 29, 2022

Lacks transparency and humility

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

When I started it was an awesome job with a dream company at which I earned opportunities that significantly shifted the trajectory of my career. I worked with some of the most talented people in the industry, who truly cared about the mission of the company and believed in what we were doing. Great health benefits, unlimited PTO, 11 holidays, some nice reimbursements, more diversity in leadership than other companies I’ve worked for (though still lacking).

Cons

A culture of arrogance and invincibility within leadership, and very little transparency. Lack of cohesion between the company’s compensation philosophy and execution. Recruiting constantly got push back from leaders on offering fair and equitable pay for external employees as internal employees continued to be extremely underpaid, despite the recommended pay scales Zillow’s own compensation team created. Ignoring these pay gaps, inefficient systems and processes, and loss of trust in the company led to a mass exodus of not only Recruiters, but across the company (on top of the mass layoffs). Zillow’s culture and benefits are strong, but there are a lot of companies that do this well. People stay because they love Zillow, and that affection has been taken advantage of by allowing employees to deplete their work/life balance and knowingly underpaying employees despite red flags raised by Recruiting. In the last year I saw Individual Contributorss to upper Management across various teams worked into the ground, many of whom were then let go due to the shut down of the Zillow Offers business. All of 2021 was focused on hyper ZO growth and the top-down messaging was consistent that the business was doing incredibly well and growing. Though Recruiting exceeded all hiring expectations the business collapsed due to mismanagement and poor decision making from the top despite warning signs from folks on the ground. The leaders who made those poor decisions, however, were not affected by layoffs. For a company that preaches “turn on the lights” as its founding core value, lying to its employees for over a year and then letting thousands of them go is the opposite of transparency.

1.0
Oct 11, 2019

BUDGET CUTS GALORE

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free snacks. Amazing people. Good core values.

Cons

CONSTANT BUDGET CUTS. Cancelled ZG Week, OK. I get it, it isn't practical. Reduce EOM lunches, OK. Understandable. But to make the annual holiday party way earlier, on a Thursday, and with NO PLUS ONES is completely disrespectful to all the employees that work so hard to make this company profitable. This time they cut the wrong corner, and it is only for the Seattle office because we are so large. So we get punished because we are growing (while smaller offices get to bring plus ones to their parties)? They say they can't accommodate plus ones because there are so many of us, but that is untrue because companies like Amazon and Facebook still manage to achieve this with way more employees. People are probably going to be looking elsewhere at companies that don't disrespect their employees like this.

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Zillow Response
6y
I could give you all of the logistical reasons we made the change- but that would likely only come across as defensive. Would be glad to sit down and answer any questions you have - reach out to me at dans@zillowgroup.com.
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