McDonald's reviews

3.6

60% would recommend to a friend

(145,119 total reviews)
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Chris Kempczinski

71% approve of CEO

50% positive business outlook

McDonald's has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 145,119 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The McDonald's employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Restaurantes y servicios de comidas industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

145K reviews
2.0
Feb 7, 2017

Very Unstable.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of consistent work, good flexible schedule policy and work life balance.

Cons

It's all white men in charge of this organization with one woman. They lack diversity in their leadership team big time. Over the last few years there have been a number of lay offs and there is a big lack of certainty about jobs. It's extremely difficult to trust leadership when you feel like no one cares about you as a person - and even if you are doing a ton of work, i.e. lots of late night, and weekend work, being a high performer doesn't mean you are exempt from potentially getting let go. And if you don't get let go, you have to worry every day about when the other shoe is going to drop. They literally do not care at all about their employees. They spent a lot of time telling us about the new building in the city, only to let us now all worry of any of us will end up making it there. It kind of feels like a sham. The compensation is not as good as good as you can get other places and there seems to be a huge disparity over how they treat men and women. There are almost no women in leadership in IT at all. And there are almost no women in the infrastructure team - literally I can think of one and that is it. It just seems kind of unbalanced.

2.0
Jul 28, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are none. Maybe the workers because they're polite and friendly.

Cons

A multi-billionaire company that pays you 5.75 per hour to work and deal with rude customers, always swearing and treating you like a dog. It's not worth it guys! Just avoid Mcdonalds. People should boycott this company for its underpaid emploees. I feel really sorry for those people that actually works there full-time! There's no future doing this job.

3.0
Nov 6, 2015

Opportunities still exist, but culture has changed

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The opportunities are there for people who desire to learn new facets of the business and/or are willing to relocate. You can begin your McDonald's career in one area of the business and seamlessly move into another area of the business with the right training and willingness to work hard to learn the new role. The opportunity exists for international roles, as well. You can work in the U.S. business and then take an assignment in Asia for a few years and then move on to Europe, Latin America, etc. McDonald's encourages career development. The company overall is extremely ethical and takes compliance very seriously. The people, for the most part, are hard working and decent people, and are cross-collaborative. McDonald's is going anywhere soon. The company will soon be a slimmed down version of its former self, but McDonald's will survive. We have an enormous worldwide customer base who will continue to eat our food and put dividends in shareholders' pockets.

Cons

Morale is at an all-time low. Employees are scared of losing their jobs and are frustrated at the lack of transparency from management. The company is starting to lose very talented people at a high rate for the first time in our company's history and this is going to continue to happen. The most important P in our Plan to Win used to be People. That is no longer true. People are now at the bottom of the list. Instead of first focusing on how to improve our business and stop operating outdated processes, that could provide a substantial cost saving, and activating around legacy events that provide no overall business value or return on investment for the company (the Olympics, the Owner-Operator Convention, national & regional company events that require enormous budgets), the company has decided to cut personnel and benefits to employees. Many of the job cuts have been at administrative and managerial levels of the company, which have a minimal impact on Q&A and cost savings. However, these are the people doing the actual functional work at the company. These are the worker bees who are making the contributions that keep the wheels turning and the lights on. There have been very few job cuts at the executive, officer or senior director level, yet this is where the most impact would take place. Company management needs to look carefully at all org charts in the company and question when there are senior directors or even directors who have no direct reports or when there are multiple senior directors or directors in a department. Is this necessary? If you have to cut personnel, at least cut the appropriate people, who impact the bottom line and do not impact the day to day work of keeping the company running. Even for people who have retained their jobs, due to cuts in some benefits programs and changes in the G&A policy, there are new out of pockets costs for employees just to do their jobs. People are working longer hours for less pay, consolidation of jobs have put enormous burdens on smaller departments, while other departments continue to grow but have yet to show their value to the turnaround of our company. Often times we operate in an environment in which we latch on to the new cool thing in the marketplace that a competitor is doing instead of focusing on innovative or building something new and proprietary to McDonald's. We look silly perpetually playing catch-up in our industry instead of trying to lead. We need to innovate around what our customers tell us they want, not what we think they want or what we see competitors doing. We have more resources and a bigger scale to showcase our innovation, yet our innovation at this point is doing what everyone else is already doing. We should be first to market with new conveniences for our customers.

Viewing 94 - 96 of 145,119 Reviews

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