MetLife reviews

3.7

67% would recommend to a friend

(6,429 total reviews)
avatar

Michel Khalaf

82% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

MetLife has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 6,429 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The MetLife employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Seguros industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
3.0
Jun 20, 2014

Rebuilding mode

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits, good working evniroment

Cons

Because the company is rebuilding things are ever changing and comunication is lacking.

1.0
Jan 14, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you are a crappy employee there are plenty of places to hide in the bureaucracy.

Cons

The new leadership does not care about the employee's. All they care about is shedding the expensive workers salaries in the Northeast. Making workers reapply for their jobs and move to NC or be laid off. This used to be a great place to work but now all of the good people that know how all the systems work are leaving in droves and anyone coming in to the IT dept has a giant pile of crap to deal with. It will be chaos there for the next several years. So enter at your own risk but remember I told you so.

2.0
Aug 9, 2012

A Clash of Two Cultures

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Large stable employer, broad industry recognition, good benefits,

Cons

1, MetLife is comprised of two groups of people. The first group was hired when MetLife was a mutual company that coddled low performing employees. This group is slow moving and adverse to change. Typically they have little technical skills and instead of helping, hinder productivity as they are incapable of grasping new software or advanced skills beyond data entry. This group routinely is incapable of performing anything beyond their normal routine and does not like to be asked to step outside of that box or learn new skills. A second group of people exists which were likely hired in the public company era. They tend to be more motivated and tech savvy, picking up the slack for the slower group but not being rewarded or recognized for this. 2. Technology - MetLife is slow and plodding. Often, IT projects are too expensive and time consuming to make realistic deadlines or implement improvements or new products/processes. MetLife is effectively held hostage by their weak IT team. Servers are slow, software updates take months; a laggard in the industry. 3. Bloated divisions - far too many employees exist in redundant roles. This limits hiring in areas that actually need employees due to MetLife's fear of downsizing. 4, Tail wags the dog - Met is improving here, but in years past, the sales team made the decisions, not the financial and actuarial analysts. Sales members were treated like gods and the budget was spent to keep them happy at the expense of the employees doing the actual work. 5. Decision making - very, very unclear who owns decisions. In fact, Met has spent a lot of money asking consultants to come in and help them with this. This started the "who has the D" question, but that is still quite unclear. MetLife is highly siloed. Information is not communicated broadly. MetLife's leadership pretends to communicate broadly by sending vague e-mails from several senior leaders, but each e-mail is a simple re-write of the previous e-mail and none give much detail. 6. Face to face interaction - Upper management is rarely in the office, and when they are, tied up in meetings all day, which makes it very unclear what they are truly working on. 7. Too many chiefs, not enough indians - simply put, most people do not want to or are not capable of doing much of the technical work at the company.

Viewing 256 - 258 of 6,429 Reviews

Glassdoor has 8,262 MetLife reviews submitted anonymously by MetLife employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if MetLife is right for you.