Meta reviews

3.6

56% would recommend to a friend

(17,922 total reviews)
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Mark Zuckerberg

46% approve of CEO

54% positive business outlook

Meta has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 17,922 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Meta 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

18K reviews
2.0
Mar 2, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay, if you negotiate aggressively Good food Good benefits Location is good, California is a nice place to live although expensive Lots of exposure

Cons

Management is constantly pushing you You don't work at your own pace, you have to work at everyone else's pace Need to stay after work everyday and go to work on weekends People are very egocentric and their ego is entirely tied to how much code they write I'm afraid of getting fired every single day

3.0
Oct 5, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Amazing benefits. They really take care of employees. - Great workplace environment. Coworkers feel like family and are very supportive of each other. - Mission of the company truly runs deep. - Flexible work hours and environment. There is generally a high degree of trust between employees.

Cons

- The open floor plan can be completely draining (especially for introverts, like myself). - Very unclear career growth. I started as an early career employee and one of the main reasons I left was because I felt like there was really little investment in my professional and personal growth. I found that Facebook really likes employees that will work hard and make them look good, but they don't care about helping you move up to the next level. There was no clear progression. A part of this is the flat organizational structure, which appeals to some but not to all. - Very millennial feeling (I'm a millennial too) and can feel extremely unprofessional at times. No line between personal and professional relationships. Again, this is up to personal choice but it didn't feel great to me all the time. - Cult-like worship of upper management (Mark and Sheryl). They are awesome people to look up to but people are not critical enough of the company all the time. It felt like people were always blind-sided by the flashiness of M-team's messaging. - Facebook hires a lot of contractors to full-time positions (especially in Austin), which can feel irksome. - Since the company has grown so much, they need to stop acting like a startup. - It's easy to do work that isn't actually fulfilling but is necessary to run the company. - Loved the mission and messaging of the company but didn't feel like my work was impactful in any way, which was an unfortunate feeling. - Pay is not that good for entry level/early career business side roles. Engineers make a lot more, unsurprisingly. - This is an engineer-run company, after all. So if you are on the business side, expect to be heavily reliant on engineering resources, which can be extremely draining and frustrating. - Facebook says it's easy to transition between roles and teams but I found that to not be true. That's another reason why I left. It may be easier on the engineering side. Additionally, being a remote office truly limits your networking and career opportunities (even if they tell you otherwise). - I had more managers than I could count in one year. The turnover was way too high and I didn't feel like anyone was invested in me. I wasn't growing and as an early career professional, growth is my top priority. - Facebook is a global company and most of its users are outside of the US. However, the mindset is still extremely American and I frankly found the way in which people talked about users outside of the US to be downright offensive at times. There was no desire to get to deeply understand user behavior and market trends outside of the US. Given how the world economy is trending, Facebook will be in a bad position if employee mindsets don't change. There are companies all over the world (especially in Asia) that are taking over (and have already taken over) the spaces Facebook is trying to break into as of late. - A combination of unclear expectations and high manager turnover led to not-stellar performance reviews for me. - People always said I could work on what interested me and what I was good at but whenever I tried to do so, I was shut down.

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Meta Response
9y
Thank you for taking the time to share your experience and feedback. Taking care of our employees is paramount to our continued growth and success. Being a part of the Facebook Family is not only a phrase, it's what we believe and practice every day. With that in mind, we'll share your feedback with our internal teams in Austin to improve upon the employee experience.
5.0
Jan 19, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* work with competent people * work impacts billions of people * lots of freedom, you generally get to choose what you want to work on as long as you can prove your abilities (in performance reviews) * pay is good, as well as all the perks

Cons

* expectations are high, so tends to eat into work-life balance * scrutiny is high, so you might get a lot of complaints (both internally and externally) depending on what you work on

Viewing 37 - 39 of 17,922 Reviews

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