Unilever reviews

4.0

80% would recommend to a friend

(11,394 total reviews)

Hein Schumacher

65% approve of CEO

63% positive business outlook

Unilever has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 11,394 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Unilever employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufactura industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

11K reviews
3.0
Sep 9, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It's a good place to grind your teeth when you start out in brand management. Great resources, talented people, lots of education and networking opportunities, ability to gain experience in various categories and brands, all while learning 'classical marketing' which sets you up well to move onto most companies.....as long as they respect classical marketing, and many do not.

Cons

The company goes through changes quite often. The culture changes, strategies change, everything. The intent is clearly change for the better, but this isn't always the case. Each new leader brings their own agenda, and often their own buddies, displacing people who are well respected long-timers, and tossing them out. There's been a tendency to flatten the pyramid....more and more at the lower levels, and fewer positions as you try to move up. From assistant to associate to manager isn't too difficult. It's trying to move up to sr. mgr. or worse yet, director where things seem to grind to a halt. Too few positions, too much politics. Politics exist in any organization, some worse than others. Overall its collaborative here depending on which group / category you work with, but it often doesnt feel like a meritocracy. The goal posts seem to move. Despite your best efforts and accolades/kudos, you can get a horrible rating or bonus based on factors that were out of your control. The attrition rate in marketing the past couple years is quite telling. Also, more Europeans and South Americans seem to be brought in especially at director level. The common sentiment is that this is because the pay rate for expats is much lower. The downside is a feeling of frustration among the Americans waiting to move up, and also given that these folks know there rotation is limited in time, there tends to be much less focus on building strategies and long term viability for a brand, and more on doing whatever it takes to deliver this years numbers, since they wont be living with the long-term repercussions of a lack of strategy/vision.

3.0
Aug 23, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits: medical, dental, long-term disability, tuition reimburssment Company store, can buy a lot of personal products for discounted price Decent salary...exactly average for the position type and region of country They pay OT for some positions

Cons

Limited locations Demand A LOT from you - have to wear their uniforms, hairnets, earplugs, painful steel toe shoes They keep the staff spread pretty thin so you are always moving Work Saturdays AND Sundays Work 12 - 16 hour shifts Have to work at night./overnight/ very early in the morning Terrible work/life balance...feels like I'm always at work. Used to have a life... not any more

3.0
Aug 15, 2014

Sales (Customer Development)

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great brands, competitive compensation, great benefits, good training ground.

Cons

- All CPG companies going through tough challenges, avoid this space if at all possible (commoditization, private label brands, retailer consolidation) - All new management with little tenure at Unilever (in US), from outside the company...therefore more than usual back stabbing, lack of trust, no relationships, no one in upper management wants to make tough decisions. Focus will be on personal care brands, which means if you are out in the field working with Grocery retailers, your relevancy to your customer is shrinking daily. I give it less than 5 years before Ice Cream is sold (margins vs personal care). They are 15 years behind P&G in pruning their Foods portfolio. - Have upgraded Talent, however if you are not a Director by age 35, you're time is limited, not a VP by 42, you are out the door. Move up or move out, no room for steady Eddies. - Moving to a revolving door enterprise, how 'sustainable' is that?

Viewing 412 - 414 of 11,394 Reviews

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