Booking.com reviews

4.1

80% would recommend to a friend

(7,594 total reviews)
avatar

Glenn Fogel

70% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

Booking.com has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 7,594 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Booking.com employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informationstechnologie industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

8K reviews
1.0
Jul 14, 2019

A new Nokia

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some people are really wonderful

Cons

The problems Booking.com faces now have been present and growing for several years. To anyone inside of the company these points are so familiar they're cliche: Any suggestion of customer focus is a falsehood. Metrics were invented which were supposed to be a proxy for customer satisfaction, when even the most inexperienced of people could see through this even as it was being introduced - the real intent of these metrics was to offer an illusion of success to an hapless executive. And yet in quarterly meeting after quarterly meeting the leaders of the business sat silent in either disbelief, or in complicity. As bumper organic growth delivered generous executive stock grants, everyone won. It was never going to last. Fast forward several years and this numerical falsehood has become dogma, and not subscribing to it is to limit your career prospects severely. One need only look at the upper ranks of leadership to conclude that the best career move is to leave your ethics at the door, refuse to engage with the concerns of the rank-and-file, dismiss consistent and cacophonous user feedback and do what mercenary and self-interested product leadership demands, no questions asked. Oh, and be a white Dutch man. That’ll also help. The lack of customer focus manifests itself in multiple and pernicious ways - from discriminatory pricing and pseudo-discounts to predatory sales techniques, inflated urgency, inflated review scores, hidden fees and buried small print - not to mention the selling of settler properties in occupied Palestine. Classy. Even having demonstrated that their aggressive sales techniques caused measurable physiological stress on customers, the company still manages to find a way to dismiss this and trot out the user centricity lie. It is impressive to have somehow convinced thousands of people to believe they are doing good things for customers when they are objectively doing bad things for customers - and yet even as the ethical baseline sinks, so does the previously rock solid growth rate. Management was a dirty word for years, and a legacy of being uncaring about people now means that even worse than having no managers, we are surrounded by bad ones - young men, mostly, who lack both business nouse and the emotional intelligence to understand people; what motivates them or how to provide an environment for people to do their best work. There is a smell of desperation coming from the technology organisation as they scramble for control having irreversibly lost it when their leader was removed from his post and was not replaced for far too long. The search took so long that the damage done will take many years to repair. Not a soul amongst the leadership have even the faintest idea about how technology works. No, this is not a tech company - it is a second hand car lot selling dingy hotel rooms in an antiquated programming language via a system of opaque policies and pricing strategies. The leadership team cult of personality is centred around a triumvirate of ethno-identical pen pushers who crave control to go with their multi-million euro salaries, and they in turn surround themselves with sycophantic yes men (yes, almost all men) - amongst them newly minted Vice Presidents who have demonstrated an aptitude only for long-term, repeated, expensive failure; adept at taking credit, cash and cachet, but not responsibility - but never fear, we are only ever one reorganisation away from figuring it all out. Project Oranje, indeed. This group will never lead this company through the critical phase it finds itself in after 3 years of false starts. Unfortunately, when it all comes crumbling down, they will still be millionaires, whilst the rest of us will be left with little more than a stain on our resumés. Emergency flares sent up to the skies above Norwalk fail to catch the eye of the elders. If only they knew. The greatest tragedy is that whilst the company swells the ranks with well paid consultant-types and low-paid CRO fodder, there is a core of utterly disengaged veteran employees who are tied to the company by virtue of a cruel compensation structure which asks for longevity over loyalty, quietude over conscience. And so these formerly brilliant people who have been tossed aside for daring to disagree are left to wilt whilst waiting for their next vesting, hoping beyond hope that in the meantime the market doesn't start to ask questions about the growth of new business units, or the scaling of rentalcars.com, or booking.com for business, or any of the myriad still-born product initiatives to have withered and died in a company which has the chutzpah to still call itself innovative - a label which coincidentally benefits it to the tune of hundreds of millions of euros in tax waivers from the Dutch government on profit almost exclusively generated overseas and funnelled back to to the Netherlands via a network of shell companies designed for this specific purpose. Experience the world, pay in Gilders. One day in the not too distant future, an MBA class will replace the classic example of Nokia with that of Booking.com - an incumbent beaten by nothing more than it's own arrogance, complacency and incompetence. You should decide if you want to be a bit part player in that case study, or not.

1.0
Nov 29, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Quite frankly, the only pro is that they will hire almost anybody, so if you have just landed to the Netherlands and you absolutely need to find a job, they will provide one for you, albeit with the lowest salary available in the country.

Cons

The salary is extremely low, the management is extremely lame. The only way to make a career to make facebook friends with the management which, in turn, suffers by an absolute lack of preparation whatsoever. The environment is extremely stressful, they try to squeeze every possible drop of life from you without providing the necessary tools. There is no investment on the customer care department, there is no training, they do not improve your knowledge in any way. There are a lot of actual and former employees with legal issues with the company, even when you finally earn (by law, after the 3rd renewal) a permanent contract, they do not hesitate to fire you or to put you in the condition to resign, which is of course illegal. Proof of it is the number of legal actions that Booking.com lost against former employees in the last years, and counting. Furthermore, working here doesn't improve your CV, everybody in the Netherlands knows that this company does not add anything to your previous experience. There is no way to stimulate your creativity, actually whenever you try to come out with something new you are pushed away by the laziest management I have ever seen. Everybody's level of incompetency is upsetting. I have been lucky enough to find another job, and I will not look back at them anymore.

1.0
Dec 2, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Relocation package is good. If you eager to leave your third-world country this is an option. - Subsidized lunches are good. - You can meet a few smart people there. Will find x5 more idiots though... - Work-life balance is good - you can do nothing for many months and no one will notice it. - Good salary and bonuses according to the local job market(which is very bad) - If you always wanted to play a "House of cards" IRL this is your chance! Don't read further, apply immediately.

Cons

First of all, I beg you to believe and I swear everything you may read in negative reviews here is absolute truth. If still you decide to join after this please have a clear understanding of why you are doing this and always keep in mind a backup plan in case you realize you can not stand it anymore. - The company doesn't make any profit because of successful tech products. The only things that make it work are lack of competition, heavy usage of dark patterns and google ads. Obviously, if you don't have a need in tech people who can do more than moving buttons around a form you don't want to waste your money and efforts for them. I believe this attitude is the main driver that leads to all the ugliness Booking has inside. - The middle management is deeply rotten. All around the company, you will find managers and product owners who only care about what is good for them to get a bonus or a promotion and don't care if these actions make sense for the company. No need to say they will evaluate you in terms if you are helping them to achieve these goals. - The first line managers aka Team Leads is nothing better. At one point a couple years back anyone who was willing to be a team leader was promoted. As you can imagine this led to many brown-nosers in TL position. Nowadays it is normal to see former UI designers and copywriters leading dev teams. Obviously, they have no clue what their people are doing and how to assess their work. - The higher management is either dumb or, what is most likely, don't care about this issues while cash-flow keeps going. - Almost any manager or product owner will retaliate over your badly in case you disagree with them. Don't worry, they will do this without violating the code of conduct. And believe me, they will make your work life miserable from that point - A noticeable part of your compensation is a bonus which is not guaranteed and can be cut off by a wish from anyone from your management line. - The company is corporate "nonsense" driven. From higher management, you will never hear anything except politically-assured answers(which are usually not the answers). For the middle management, you will easily notice a huge difference between what they say and what they do. - No need to say your technical skills and achievements worth nothing at Booking. Most likely you also won't learn anything new. After a few years there no decent tech company will hire you. - I will not elaborate on this but here is a huge amount of politics on every level. - There are quotas in recruitment and promotions. Which may be good for you if you are a girl. - Recently started a cost-cutting which is nothing good. No one knows which benefit will disappear the next month. - Local Amsterdam job market is very bad. You will hardly find a company who can pay you comparable to Booking, which makes you sit in a golden cage if you were committed to this move. Booking knows this so they will squeeze all the forces out of you until you are empty, then they will throw you away.

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