Booking.com reviews

4.1

80% would recommend to a friend

(7,582 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 7,582 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 Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

8K reviews
5.0
Sep 12, 2015

I'm loving B.com @ Buenos Aires

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Leader and dynamic company with good opportunities to growth. Very team work oriented with a very nice people to work. I like the office atmosphere and th constantly and valuable trainings: onlines, at the office and in Amsterdam. The managers helps a lot to create this environment and encourage you to develop your skills. I recommend it as a very nice place to work and growth.

Cons

The salary could be better. ;)

5.0
Apr 22, 2019

Awesome!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

First off the atmosphere and diversity is amazing. It’s an awesome company to work for. The pay is good and quarterly bonuses are a perk. They offer free food a lot and the canteen offers healthy food choices that B.com pays 50% of the price for. They offer Monster energy drinks in the canteen and free Starbucks coffee. The PTO is also very good.

Cons

None that I can think off.

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
Viewing 16 - 18 of 7,582 Reviews

Glassdoor has 9,124 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.