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Royal Caribbean Group

Engaged Employer

Royal Caribbean Group reviews

3.9

67% would recommend to a friend

(2,123 total reviews)
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Jason Liberty

74% approve of CEO

69% positive business outlook

Royal Caribbean Group has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 2,123 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Royal Caribbean Group employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Hoteles y complejos turísticos industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
4.0
Dec 22, 2015

A few comments

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Excellent Dental and medical Benefits, onsite cafeteria, daycare, and gym. Cruise benefits and travel discounts.

Cons

Promotions are very political, they are mainly based on "Who you know" instead how well a person may be qualified to do the job.

1.0
Jul 2, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The benefits are decent, as long as you can somehow find the time to take advantage of them. They also feed you when you're forced to work an inhumane amount of hours.

Cons

You have to fight to get any recognition for your work. There is no incentive to work hard and try to do great things, since no one will care or even notice. The working conditions are horrific. You are forced to work a ridiculous amount of hours on weekdays and weekends. Your personal life takes a back seat here. There is no such thing as career growth. You will learn nothing other than surviving under the most stressful working conditions I've experienced. I'm no stranger to hard work but the way we were treated was simply ridiculous. The culture is one that rewards bigotry and incompetence, and punishes good employees and productivity. They have no idea that they're actually hurting themselves. The turnover rate is incredibly high. Most of management should be replaced with people who actually care about others, the industry, and the company.

2.0
Dec 28, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Beautiful building, full of light. Gourmet food in the cafeteria for only $4 for a whole meal State of the art fitness facility with the best fitness coordinator on the planet Working with travel agents is much nicer than working with direct guests Incentive pay Pay is good for this area

Cons

1. Because the groups/STAR department has more training than individual reservations, the company literally dumps calls from 12 different departments on us constantly, but requires us to keep up with the 300 groups assigned to each one of us without giving us extra time off the phone. If we are five days late making our call outs for group deadlines, we lose our incentive pay, but we aren't given the time to do our jobs. So, many times we work off the clock so that we can stay on top of things. Then, when a bunch of people left the groups/STAR department for several other departments, they only hired about 1/3 of the replacements they needed for the people that left, and just increased the number of groups we each have to handle. Their reasoning was that we are getting our work done, so they don't need as many people. Right. It's because we are working without pay so that we don't get penalized for not getting our work done!!! 2. 50% of the shifts offered to us in Springfield either have split days off (like Wednesday and Sunday), or a closing shift. I understand that they need to staff the closing shifts, but everyone hates them because we have to clear the queue before we can clock out. Sometimes we are there an hour after closing. The company needs to offer higher pay for people assigned a closing shift. That way, people would take the shift by choice and other people could take some of those primo shifts. I might take a closing shift by choice if it paid a dollar an hour more. 3. The new Quality Assurance scoring is ridiculous. The intent of it is great - better customer service, but they need to make it a coaching thing and not tie it to our incentive pay. I've rarely seen anything as nuts as this company's new QA system. It's Alice in Wonderland. 4. The top ten ranked people in our department are on leave through the Family Medical Leave Act. Those of us who show up for work everyday get ranked lower because we get more QA scores and more opportunity to commit some faux pas like saying port charges instead of "non-commissionable cruise fare." If people aren't there, they should not get top ranking. Those of us who do OUR jobs and THEIRS both, should be rewarded with top ranking.

Viewing 34 - 36 of 2,123 Reviews

Glassdoor has 3,377 Royal Caribbean Group reviews submitted anonymously by Royal Caribbean Group employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Royal Caribbean Group is right for you.