once a well-respected company, now a sad disoriented group of people - Anonymous employee Elsevier Employee Review

1.0
Jan 12, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

some social benefits (vacation days, pension) nice colleagues

Cons

a complete lack of consistent vision and strategy no customer orientation - the customer satisfaction in their products is way below any acceptable level; important decisions are not communicated to employees - people are very often unaware of the future changes in their department and their roles; spontanious, arbitrary desicion making on the top level; no innovation and backward thinking; very negative culture

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5.0
May 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Industry leader Great benefits Incentive trips Invests heavily in its employees

Cons

Processes can be burdensome and clunky at times

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Elsevier Response
3w
Thank you for this balanced and thoughtful review. We're glad to hear that our benefits and investment in people are making a positive impact, those are commitments we take seriously. On the process feedback: Leadership is actively reviewing operational workflows, and the advice to listen more closely to employee feedback is something we're holding ourselves accountable to. If you're open to it, we'd encourage you to bring specific examples forward through your team or people and culture contacts. Change is most effective when it's grounded in the real experiences of the people doing the work, and that means you. Feel free to reach out to us at elseviergdrev@elsevier.com to provide more information Thank you for staying engaged and for caring enough to share this. It matters.
4.0
Jun 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Every direct manager I've had has been excellent: supportive, positive, and trusting me to deliver good work instead of micromanaging. Employees tend to stay, which suggests stability even if not everyone gets promotions or significant raises.

Cons

The pressure to outsource as much as possible, which is common at every publisher, leads to frustration. Because promotions or significant raises seem to be rare, you may be stuck in neutral unless you're very openly ambitious.

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