Booking.com reviews

4.1

80% would recommend to a friend

(7,592 total reviews)
avatar

Glenn Fogel

71% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

Booking.com has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 7,592 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 IT industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

8K reviews
1.0
Mar 27, 2018

A company without conviction

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some people are excellent, tirelessly working to improve the product for the customer.

Cons

This is a company without conviction. A company that has truly lost its way. Here are a few of the reasons why. The leadership team are dominated by a Dutch cabal of naive, ridiculously fortunate people who have removed themselves from direct contact with the product and people. The incongruity of them parading their badge of humbleness along with their celebrity status at events is lost on them. Having never led a business through any serious challenges and bereft of ideas, the current strategy is as ill thought as it is limiting. The CPO is dangerous. It beggars belief that he has risen to this level given his paucity of industry experience. He excels at giving an opinion with both an absence of wisdom and a lack of conviction. He appears to be labouring under a mistaken belief that reading a few business books will raise him on a par with industry product design champions. He is widely known for the cynical removal of experienced product leaders who might have challenged him, the avoidance of accountability and an utter disregard for his direct reports. However, he does like a drink, so opportunities for career growth can be found outside the office with a willingness to plump up his ego and play to his insecurities. It aids him greatly that the CEO has zero interest or capability for product insight and vision. Instead she trots out vague sentiments heavily laced with company nostalgia. This is not inspiring. Some people are pretty good. You’d expect that in a company of this size but every one who racks up a decent tenure here has their own list of shocks and weird stuff that happens. Be it poor decision making, inappropriate behaviour against women, volte face reinvention of bad ideas or the uncanny, continual meetings where people talk in a clunky mix of meaningless business jargon and plain balderdash. Restructures are common, these keep several tiers of managers in their jobs. There is a lot of busy work. Most managers and leaders of the technology teams may have once been competent developers but are now responsible for people management. That they are woefully under schooled in this, especially in the critical skill of good old fashioned empathy, is another marker of promoting people beyond their emotional intelligence. With a deeply political environment do not expect promotions will have a rational or equate with demonstrable ability. For all the desperate promotion of the company values, the massive growth of recruitment led to dissolution of the culture and radical dilution of experience. The hiring bar was surprisingly low for a very long time. This perspective is not an outlier. It’s recognised by most who have spent at least a couple of years here. There are many, many people clocking in and checked out. All waiting for another windfall from vested stock. Plenty of people are looking over their shoulder to check they are still under the radar. You can drift, you can collect the salary and you can hide. It’s a shame because there are still those who really want to make a difference. Some more cynical folks rub their hands in glee at the thought of the company being subpoenaed to release archives of internal communications. There is so much gold. Meanwhile, the delusion of a hive of innovation persists in desperate attempts to build out new product ranges. These are woeful in their conception and implementation. Further evidence of an anti-Midas product lead. With nothing of worth or impact being delivered the illusion of success is masterfully presented. It is all smoke and mirrors. The company has a collective amnesia on how to build a valued and effective product from the ground up but it is brilliant at finessing a mature product lathered with persuasive patterns (continually straying over the ethical line), monetising the traffic and selling hotel rooms in established regions. On the factory floor, the tropes of being data driven are reductionist as the dogma approaches dangerous levels . Citing persistent customer feedback or indeed voicing an empathy for the customer falls on fallow ground. Expertise in the analysis of data is presumed by everyone yet practised by a few. Target chasing of a pointless metric has led to decisions that have crippled the product yet the rise of customer dissatisfaction remains ignored. If the line goes up to the right everyone is happy. Good tools in the wrong hands has led to the wrong metrics being measured and sometimes these aren’t even measured accurately. Collect all the data you like, if you can’t interpret, apply insight or try to understand why something is happening then you are left with the fallacy of being data driven whilst your short term success is built on sand. The company is moribund but such is its size the death throes will not be realised for years. There are better places to work.

avatar
Booking.com Response
8y
Thank you for your feedback. We can see that you’ve been with Booking.com for the last 5 years and we’re always grateful when members of our team take the time to tell us how they are feeling to help us learn and develop. You’ve been with us during a period of significant growth and strategic transition which may not have been easy and we’re sorry to hear that you feel we’ve lost our way. For our part, we can honestly say we’ve never felt more convinced that the direction we are heading is the right one for our future, so much so that we are proud to speak about that publicly. That doesn’t mean we want to forget where we have come from and how we’ve achieved that success as a team of more than 17,000 employees worldwide who we hope share our genuine desire to create a better experience for our customers. While our roots may be Dutch, we have a hugely diverse workforce of more than 150 nationalities, and in growing our leadership recently we have been excited to include new members with diverse backgrounds and perspectives from both within and outside of Booking.com. We take the concerns you raise seriously and we care very much about ensuring an open and fair culture at Booking.com. As you will know, we have recently conducted an extensive employee engagement survey so will be assessing the findings with our leadership team and taking action where improvement is needed over the coming months. We hope you can be patient with us. You are clearly passionate about creating a better experience for both your colleagues and our customers so we’d love it if you connected with our Head of People on some of the specific concerns you raise, or if you prefer you are always able to discuss anything confidentially in more detail on our 24 hour compliance hotline. We hope you’ll stay with us and help be part of any change that you’d like to see as we enter new chapters in Booking.com’s journey. Many thanks, The People Team at Booking.com
3.0
Nov 27, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Very international environment, many smart people from around the world - Good compensation and benefits - Support for you and your family with relocation and paperwork - Many opportunities for quick career growth (if you want it) - Very good office location - Good office facilities, cafeterias, cheap lunches, free snacks and fruits - Many projects to choose from (depends on a manager) - Agile attitude without too much of the methodological nonsense - Flexible working hours (not for everyone) - Various events at the office - Hotel discounts PS Things might have changed since 2016.

Cons

(This is a summary of a review I wrote before, and then deleted out of fear. I will let this one stay). When people scream "Booking can destroy your life!" on this and other websites, it's not an exaggeration. If you cross the company (and you won't even know it at the time), the retaliation will be absolutely insane. The abuse I experienced during and after my employment is unbelievable, and to this day I'm afraid to share the details publicly. Before Booking I was a traveller and a developer, now I'm unemployed for almost 3 years, with no opportunity to lead normal life at all. The level of cynicism is what makes Booking special, compared to other giant companies. Your colleagues will write blog posts about "empathy" and "kindness" while simultaneously helping to turn every day of your life into a nightmare, both online and offline. Once you are The Enemy, there are no limits. They will mock any illness or disability you or your family members had. All of your internet searches, social media posts, online purchases, email etc. will be presented in some negative light and used against you. Even if you've been a good colleague and a friend all this time, the Ministry of Truth will make sure nobody believes you (popular fairly tale cover stories for employees leaving abruptly are burnout and depression). In the end you won't be able to prove a thing - people aren't so stupid to say your name explicitly while abusing you. Any supporters will be silenced and any friendships destroyed. The negative effects will continue long after you've been forced to quit. To be fair, they will give you a good-bye bonus, to make sure you have enough money to move out of the country, if you are an expat. It's a five-star company if money is all you're after, but zero-star if you want to have a meaningful life in the process. You can succeed if you disconnect you private and work life *completely*. No personal devices, accounts, conversations, phone calls at the office. No friendships at work. No work in your free time. Be a good 9-to-5 citizen and everything will be fine. I'm aware how different this sounds from the official company mantra about openness, care, inclusiveness. The company has deep roots with some rich folklore and is well-known for its parties, but the start-up days are long gone. What's left is propaganda and a shiny image. Don't trust that image: Booking is a multi-billion giant and has enough money to do anything it wants with your life, including taking away your most fundamental rights to privacy, safety and security. Most likely it won't happen to you, but it can. Be aware.

1.0
Apr 10, 2018

This company has lost its way

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The environment is an international one. There are some great people working really hard.

Cons

This is an awful company to work for. It has stagnated, it is in a state of panic devoid of any clear direction and many, many people are in a state varying between numb, angry and sad. The executive leadership team is made of teflon. It’s a mess and while many can see this, few understand how a company that is doing so poorly in both spirit and results can leave these people untouched and blame free. The supposed innovation hub, the teams who will take Booking.com into its next golden age, sit in an actual ivory tower in a separate building. This is where the true work takes place. Here is where you’ll find the real product geniuses. Unfortunately, their genius is only legend; as of yet many are still waiting to witness it. This org has been set up to never have to interact with people who have actually touched the product before or may have been around a while, or indeed anyone who might challenge them on direction. They play by a different set of rules due to their (secret) product super powers so they don’t have to show progress or talk to anyone outside of their bubble. Due to their arrogance, many prefer this. Their original innovation weapon of choice and one revealed with such pomp and circumstance was based on giving stuff to people for free but they forgot that this involved numbers, math and actual careful thought and because no one had worked that part out it all went horribly wrong. The mess was quietly swept under the carpet without any pomp or circumstance or reflection or talk of learning, and no one spoke of it again. Now it is the constant surveying of tired and fed up customers who just want to book a room for a family of four but don’t understand our website and don’t understand why we can’t stop screaming at them with intrusive messaging. They ask vapid obvious questions and largely ignore what the results say so that they can just execute whatever the so called product VPs running the show want. No one is really sure what success looks like, either in the org or outside of it. Nothing significant has been achieved in over 2.5 years of work in the area nor is it close to being. Although perhaps adding breakfast to the confirmation page was a real high-five, crack-out-the-champagne product win. We could hear the back slapping across town. KPIs, results and any actual progress would surely reveal the sorry state this innovation hub is in so these stay well buried. The strategy, however, is rolled out time and time again in company meetings and events. The audience is numb to it and no longer asks questions but does their bit to keep up the Emperor’s New Clothes charade. Everyone in that room knows it’s all smoke and mirrors and the corridor chatter is harsh. The leadership team are leaders in name only. They comprise of a group of individuals so out of their depth, so incompetent and so uninspiring it is truly staggering. They ride on the coat-tails of the company’s past success and pat themselves on the back for jobs well done while we stand in awe of how little they have actually achieved and how much damage they are inflicting on their departments. When they do a truly bad job, they often get rewarded with greater responsibility. They think they are doing everyone a service when they come out for yet another redundant All Hands or quarterly business meeting yet these trite appearances are usually met with eye-rolling, mockery or pure anger since they never actually answer a question. Because they don’t want to or can’t simply because they don’t have the EQ to understand the questions being asked of them is up for debate. A real high moment was when the millionaires were sat on the stage and heartily laughed at a question posted about why people are paid so poorly at the company. It’s easy to laugh at anything when you’ve got that much money in the bank. People are rarely managed or developed and this is widely acknowledged across multiple levels and strata of the company. This is because the senior management team hate…management. They are the worst managers out there and some of them actively avoid contact with their direct reports. It is disgusting. As a result the safe ones who execute their dirty work or the better drinking buddies get further and further up the food chain. Vague sentiments about what they’ve achieved are lorded via company’s biggest time wasting facebook at work platform while fake congratulations are doled out by colleagues who are generally just scratching their heads in utter bemusement. Performance reviews, when they bother to do them, are painfully awkward because they are based almost entirely on nothing. The employee writes most of it themselves then reads it aloud while a vacant manager mainly just sits there nodding. Self reflection is fine and necessary but a review is a two-way street. Occasionally they will chime in with the most benign and generic advice possible. You gratefully accept either their criticism or praise just to get it over with but inside screaming “how are you paid this much money to have no original insight and no ability to challenge me in any way?” Then it dawns on you that they haven’t seen you in months, they’ve not bothered to speak to anyone else who has been working with you so their one contribution to the review is one (usually biased) data point that has lost all relevance. Plus they just don’t care and are as eager to get it over with as you are. If you challenge them on this you will be seen as ‘difficult’ and unable to reflect so best to keep it to yourself. Anyone who has woken up to what this company is and has become will be tarred with being too cynical or not being able to keep up with the company’s pace of growth. This is just a further excuse that allows those at the top to sleep a little better at night.

avatar
Booking.com Response
8y
Thank you for being so open and honest with your feedback. We’re really sorry to hear that your personal experience has not been what you had hoped. We want to ensure that you feel part of a supportive and inclusive workplace and we'd love to work with you to help turn your experience around. It looks like you’ve been with us for the last 3+ years. During your time here, it’s been a period of significant growth and strategic transitioning. We’ve always been a company that thrives on experimentation and driving change. It might not have been easy for everyone, but it’s been a key step in getting us to the future. We take your concerns seriously, especially the ones you’ve brought up about development and leadership. Please know that we value our employees immensely and want everyone to have opportunities and we strongly believe that every employee deserves a fair and transparent feedback process to ensure that success. As you will know from our recent all-company meeting, performance management is going to be our key focus for 2018 so we hope you will see significant positive changes in this area which in turn should also help in some of the other areas you mention such as ensuring that all our managers are assessing their teams in a consistent and fair way. We’ve also recently hired a new Learning and Development Director who is helping revamp our review and training processes, which will also help our managers to develop and improve. We have many fantastic managers, but until we can ensure a consistent management experience for every employee we know there is more work for us to do. You’ve written a very detailed review, which clearly shows that you care about creating a better place to work. Our HR team would love to hear more from you directly on your personal experience and to get further insight. We hope you’ll stay with us as we work together to drive positive change. Many thanks, The People Team at Booking.com
Viewing 1 - 3 of 7,592 Reviews

Glassdoor has 9,135 Booking.com reviews submitted anonymously by Booking.com employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Booking.com is right for you.