Booking.com reviews

4.1

80% would recommend to a friend

(7,584 total reviews)
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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 7,584 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
1.0
Jul 1, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you love traveling you can put-up with this job for a while. Get hired before mid-july so you meet the cutoff date to go to the christmas party in Amsterdam... and then quite after you get back! Depending on which office you are in, you work with some great people!

Cons

Every post on here about poor management is 110% accurate! I saw the extremely negative posts prior to accepting the position and thought to myself, they were just young, mad, unmotivated employees that probably got fired. You see, I was not a "fresh out of college" type of employee. I had thought I would be able to work with them and do well. In hindsight, I probably shouldn't have got my hopes up, they are/were the worst managers I have every worked with/for. And to be fair, they were put in those positions unprepared and under supported. So I might go as far as saying they were good people, just horrible horrible horrible managers. And I didn't get fired. I left and returned to my old industry and am making double. The list of Cons go On and On.... I agree with most of the previous posts, so go back, and read. And please note that if there is a post that rates this company over 2 stars, you can disregard as it is probably middle management trying to better the ranking. I do know that its not upper management because I saw how they responded to their employee engagement survey: by doing nothing...........

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Booking.com Response
11y
Supporting and developing new managers is a really big emphasis for us, and something that we're getting stronger at all the time. Thanks for writing.
1.0
Jul 8, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

HQ in Amsterdam Distractions which can keep you superficially happy...summer party... Most people are smart

Cons

Leadership plays around with peoples lives and careers...its a game Everyone's just a statistic...and treated like one HR comes up with stupid policies, these are always implemented with no warning and no care for who's affected and how...tell them obvious problems, and you get a standard that "sorry we made a mistake but we are learning"...growing pains... Typical of a big company...politics...drama...retaliation everywhere

2.0
May 6, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I made some good friends, going to Amsterdam for training is fun (once or twice - then it's not fun, and certainly not worth sacrificing a lot of money - which you're likely giving up by working here). Traveling is cool, and if you have a desirable territory, it's really cool for a while. If you do not, it'll be a challenge but try to make the best of it. I do credit Booking.com with teaching me a lot - running successful meetings, selling, upselling, managing accounts - I achieved all of this and I appreciate that.

Cons

This is a mediocre place to work, and it'll never be more. However much they preach the importance of the EES (employee engagement survey), the company will not change in order to boost morale. The company gets very mediocre scores on the survey each year (employees on average rate it a 7/10 or so, but when it comes to compensation, the company gets murdered, as it should. Management will act surprised, and send out an email stating they're going to do market research to determine "the average" that someone with the title "account manager" makes, and then you may get a $200 per year raise (wow nice!) or you'll never hear about it again. Despite Darren Huston (now the former CEO) claiming we have millions of dollars in the bank, and also having enough for countless acquisitions, somehow the company can't afford to pay a decent wage in some of the most expensive cities in the US. Year after year you'll hear outlandish claims like "booking.com wants to be the best place in the world to work." The problem is that becoming the best in anything (school, sports, any profession, etc.) takes investment. It takes time, money, effort, etc. Booking.com literally changes nothing, despite claiming this every year. It's offensive and sad. The pay is disastrous and quite embarrassing actually. A market manager at Booking.com's biggest competitor (Expedia) makes more than an Area Manager at Booking.com, and an area manager manages a team of people managers, who manage market managers. Each year Forbes releases a list of the average starting salary for recent college grads in major US cities - it's very sad, but this list often times proves that NEW COLLEGE GRADS - 21, 22 year olds, make more than an Account Manager at Booking.com after 5 years. An AM of 5 years gets an annual merit increase of about $500-1k per year - that's 1-2%, and doesn't quite cover the cost of inflation - for you Econ majors. Lastly - despite what a recruiter might tell you, the bonus potential is absolutely poor. If you hit 110% to target EVERY SINGLE QUARTER, your total bonus amount will equal close to $6,000 - that's annual - not every 3 months. I know this, because it's happened. $6,000 might actually be generous too.

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