Capital One reviews

5.0

100% would recommend to a friend

(13,131 total reviews)
avatar

Richard D. Fairbank

100% approve of CEO

100% positive business outlook

Capital One has an employee rating of 5.0 out of 5 stars, based on 13,131 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Capital One employee rating is 34% above average for employers within the Finanzas industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

13K reviews
1.0
Dec 21, 2023

Toxic Beyond Belief

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Reasonable pay • Enough PTO, where you can actually disconnect from the office • Nice perks • Interesting and talented co-workers

Cons

• Absolutely abhorrent Performance Management. Employees are rated on a bell curve against other employees at their same level (but often VERY DIFFERENT roles), in a closed meeting called a “Calibration”. 20% need to be ranked at the bottom, regardless of actual performance, so the rating is meaningless. This encourages backstabbing, secrecy, lack of teamwork, and the employees that come out on top are not necessarily better performers, just better liked by the management group, better at self-promotion, or have more visible projects. Also, you will not actually be assessed based on your job description, but on additional projects, no matter how inane or useless, as long as you can convince people that you are “going above and beyond”. If you have a non-assertive manager, or if they don’t like you, forget about doing well on Performance Management. • Capital One prides itself of being Well-Managed, which couldn’t be further from the truth. In reality, there is an abundance of ineffectual middle managers who often do not have the technical skills necessary to lead their teams. Because promotions are rare, managers make lots of lateral moves into roles they have no understanding of. There is zero accountability for poor management, as there are no mechanisms by which direct reports can rate their manager. My current manager basically does nothing all day, taking credit for the work our team does and throwing us under the bus when something goes wrong (often their idea). • Capital One is increasingly using Performance Improvement Plans (PIPs) to protect themselves so they can more easily lay people off. I have seen talented, knowledgeable colleagues get placed on PIPs. I don’t know of anyone who has successfully completed a PIP at Capital One. It is just a convenient off-ramp. • 2023 has seen massive amounts of layoffs. Some of the people who I have seen get fired are fantastic hard-workers, pregnant colleagues, colleagues who are right smack in the middle of maternity leave, and colleagues who requested a remote accommodation for health reasons. Almost always, they will pretend that these upstanding employees have performance issues in order to fire them. Meanwhile, the CEO sits around at the yearly company meeting simpering about “doing the right thing” and “changing banking for good”. Did I mention he received $27 million in total comp in 2022? (50% bump from 2020) • There’s a group of "dinosaurs” at Capital One: Employees who have been at Capital One for 20, 25 years. They pretend like it’s a huge accomplishment, when really they are just complacent and scared to get out in the world and move their career forward. They know they are mostly unemployable outside of Capital One, so they protect and cover for one another, while keeping the boot firmly on newer hires. • Capital One has a non-retaliation policy that is basically just for show. If you criticize anything, from Performance Management to your actual manager, you will be retaliated against. It’s best to keep your mouth shut and your head down. Those are the people who are well-liked by the dinosaurs, and who get ahead (though painstakingly slow). • Capital One pushes DIB very hard, and again, it’s a lot of fluff but no substance. They will launch huge social media campaigns and decorate the Capital One Cafés, but there is almost no actual diversity. Upper management is mostly all White and predominantly male. Despite what they say, new ideas and innovation are not welcome. • Associate Relations is there TO PROTECT THE EMPLOYER. It is a horrible idea to resort to them at any point. • Finally, I have no idea how Capital One is on the Best Places to Work list. Something seems off.

3.0
Aug 18, 2023

Culture Shift

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexibility, good place for early career to gain experience or parents with young children who need flexibility in their schedule.

Cons

Lack of opportunities to move up the ladder unless you “play the game”. Lack of training for leaders. Arbitrary performance management & development program. The Bell Curve performance system forces leaders to pick a low performer regardless of actual performance. Additionally, Cross Calibrations require leaders to compare people doing vastly different roles simply because of a shared job code. Culture in the past 6 months has changed drastically for the worse, and it is so disappointing to see a company I have always been so proud to for shift their values so abruptly. To avoid the bad PR of layoffs, they are making leaders “manage out” associates with baseless performance claims. I’ve watched this happen to so many colleagues in the past year.

2.0
Apr 27, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- If you're coming straight from school, you may meet your best friends here - Good benefits (relatively) - If you luck into one of the ~5 good managers at the company, you'll have a good time until you rotate - Good tech to learn and gain experience on

Cons

I think the worst part about this company is how disingenuous it is. They are really good at paying lip service to important issues such as Diversity, Empathy, Transparency, Work/Life balance, but then try to find any evidence of progress within any of these areas (if you're truly data-driven, then this is a no-brainer), and you won't find any. Diversity: They recruit from the same 4 schools in Canada, from the same 3 programs, which have the same type of students and people from similar backgrounds (McGill, Queens, UofT, Waterloo..). Where is your diversity? When asked about why we don't recruit from other schools, you'll get some bs answer that boils down to "we are biased and we like our bias so we won't change". Empathy: The amount of associates who have left purely because of their manager's emotional incompetence is absurd. The managers here are promoted not for their ability to manage people, but for their ability to deliver "results", which means that if your whole team is burnt out and depressed, but your manager appears to have reached some goal (emphasis on APPEAR), then they will get promoted and you'll be left with nothing but emotional trauma. What do they do about this? An optional 2 hour empathy training. Transparency: If you directly ask senior leadership anything that isn't a set up for an ego stroke then you will get a vague, standard PR answer that is of no substance. "What are you doing about the absurdly high attrition?" "Why won't you pay us more?" "What is this business trying to do exactly? Other an exploit poor people". Answer? "Great question! We are excited about the future of Capital One Canada! What you're asking is important to us, and we will continue to work hard on providing those answers :)" WLB: Mixed bag, you may luck into a team that isn't doing anything, so you're free to spend the day on Reddit or applying to other jobs, or you may be absurdly busy. In any case, you will have way more meetings than you care for. Other notable issues: - They cannot retain top talent they have nothing to offer to anyone with skill and ambition. The pay isn't good, the work gets boring, the company is stagnant, the managers are bad - Senior leadership loves to talk about themselves and what hobbies they have, etc. at every meeting.... Who told them this was a good idea? - Leadership is extremely biased, but will constantly tell you how unbiased they try to be. Yet, if you don't think like them, you will not get far. - Titles are inflated. When you eventually leave, if you go to a REAL tech company, your title will decrease, but you'll be paid minimum 30%-50% more. Capital One is obsessed with titles and hierarchy, so don't get too attached to that "senior" next to your role. - Once you hit senior, you are not paid well if you are in a technical/analytical role. - If you're an external hire coming into a senior role, you will not get promoted unless you completely conform to their way of doing things. Again, absurdly biased - So many people who have never worked elsewhere saying how great it is comparatively.... - Our business model is literally charge poor people for being poor

Viewing 46 - 48 of 13,131 Reviews

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