GLG reviews

2.6

23% would recommend to a friend

(2,272 total reviews)
avatar

Gemma Postlethwaite

20% approve of CEO

17% positive business outlook

GLG has an employee rating of 2.6 out of 5 stars, based on 2,272 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The GLG employee rating is 30% below average for employers within the Administración y consultoría industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
Feb 15, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

GLG has a few perks going for it: -Compensation: GLG pays fairly well considering that most hires are liberal arts majors. -Free coffee bar, snacks and food in the office occasionally. -The job gets you to Austin, which is an amazing city for young professionals with tons of opportunity. -Interesting and intelligent coworkers

Cons

GLG is a toxic workplace, with terrible management and an upside-down business model. For any ambitious, driven, intelligent, hardworking and independent people, this company will be your kryptonite. A few points that I observed/dealt with during my 3+ year tenure with the company. Not a Performance Based Culture: No matter what management pretends to tell you, performance and talent are in no way linked to who gets promoted, who gets the biggest bonuses, etc. Promotions are given to tenured employees who are low/average performers who do not get burned out. The top performing employees and driven professionals quickly burn out, leave for new jobs within 1-2 years, or leave for grad school. The ones who stick around are the average performers who “drink the kool-aid”. Despite being a high performer, I was legitimately told by several people at the TL, VP and SVP level to “drink the kool-aid” if I wanted to progress and get promoted. They want people who follow orders rather than ask questions. Quickly touching on compensation, bonuses were cut smaller and smaller every year I was at GLG. Senior managers gobbled up the financial gains while over-working the revenue generating associates. It’s no wonder employee turnover exceeds 30%+. Terrible Management and Business Model: Nearly all of the revenue generated at GLG is by the new associates (0-2 years tenure). Once you get to the Team Leader level, you stop taking any client work and start “managing” a team of people. Managing has become a 1984esque structure where e-mail time stamps are tracked (i.e., being scolded for not responding to a Sunday client e-mail over a holiday weekend, etc), managers can send pop-ups to your screen to make you complete tasks immediately, and every possible metric that can be tracked on employees is viewed by 2-3 levels of managers above you. Meanwhile, TLs and above have no client responsibilities so they do not have to work late into evenings, on weekends, and operate under 30+ metrics every time they open their computers. Changes are terribly communicated to new hires, and almost always increase micromanagement and automation (i.e templates to e-mail clients rather than human responses, checking boxes when setting up projects rather than creative brainstorming) Council Member Management: One of the most disheartening things to see during my time at the company was how it treats its 'Council Members', or the primary product, the network of expert consultants. New employees are required to bring in dozens of high caliber, successful business experts to our network. Once brought in, GLG treats the experts like absolute garbage. For example, a switch to only paying them in gift cards rather than cash. Inaccurate 'rate setting' polices to undercut their hourly rate, systems that encourage/force employees to call/email professionals 10-15 times a day about 'urgent' client work, and rolling out tech buttons to deceive them to consult free of charge, lower rate and any other cost cutting mechanism you can image. At the rate this is going, I doubt GLG will be able to keep/retain experts based on how poorly they are treated and how much of a hassle it becomes. HR Policies: Unlimited vacation policy is a scam, new associates are inadvertently told not to take any time off in order to hit impossibly high targets, while senior managers are known to take month+ long vacations. The company boasts “an average of 15 days off per employee”, do the math.

avatar
GLG Response
8y
I’m sorry you had a bad experience at GLG, but I feel that this review misrepresents what it’s like to work here for the majority of GLGers. It sounds like your experience around performance and growth was very specific to you. Either way, I hope that anyone who feels they’re having a similar experience is comfortable reaching out to me or another senior leader. At a high level, I think you get it wrong about our trajectory and business model. Not only are we growing quickly, our clients and Council Members (according to both surveys and anecdotal feedback) have never been more satisfied with the service we are providing. Yes, we have more work to do, but we are committed to increasing the resources allocated towards doing that work – from great GLGers to technology.
3.0
Feb 5, 2018

Vibrant atmosphere, helpful team colleagues

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The office vibe is great for newly graduated students

Cons

The work is tiring and repetitive

1.0
Jan 30, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Peer group is smart, fun, and the only thing that gets you out of bed and into the office on some days. -Hires smart, driven (albeit, directionless) folks; grants responsibility early if you prove functional.

Cons

-GLG is confused about who it wants to be when they grow up. Strategy arbitrarily shifts on a quarterly basis, leaving the bulk of employees discouraged, confused, and “back to square one” with regards to achieving their goals. -Investors drive unrealistic growth expectations that are then endorsed by the C-Suite and pummeled down the pipeline to the front lines. Despite triple digit YoY growth, expectations push ever-hire despite a shrinking market. -“Research” groups do not conduct research. The role is largely similar to working in an outsourced administrative services company. You can expect to spend the bulk of your time scheduling calls in lieu of your clients’ PAs. Other work perks include long hours (evenings, holidays, and weekends), as well as a long string of metrics that are subject to change every 6 weeks. GLG will cite being “a fast, dynamic company” as the reason for this if you ask in an interview. On the contrary, this is a reflection of the strategic identity crisis they’ve been in the midst of for 24 months and/or a reaction to an offering that’s come to light from a competitor. -If you’re on a product team, you can expect to be treated like a second class citizen. Job perks include getting paid less than your peers in the “Research” departments, fighting tooth-and-nail for ostensible table scraps for your teams, and the occasional promise of breakthroughs in technology. These teams are severely understaffed, despite running margins hire than any other segment of the company. -HR in conjunction with senior influence endorses an environment of dubious hiring/firing practices (or the most loved “managing out” process). They preach diversity, yet every incoming class of associates is a carbon copy of the last - white, proto-Fratboy/girl reflections of one another. The occasional token person of color. Losing the head of HR in Austin as a proponent was a grave mistake. Truly, the only person with character in that entire department. -Communication is GLG’s biggest challenge. With funding, they’ve grown rapidly in size over the course of the past few years. Despite growth, they continue to operate at a Freshman level with regards to expectation management, top-down communication, and in empowering their managers to be transparent with their teams.

Viewing 1906 - 1908 of 2,272 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,559 GLG reviews submitted anonymously by GLG employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if GLG is right for you.