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Lloyds Banking Group

Engaged Employer

Lloyds Banking Group reviews

3.6

62% would recommend to a friend

(7,477 total reviews)
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Charlie Nunn

64% approve of CEO

57% positive business outlook

Lloyds Banking Group has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 7,477 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Lloyds Banking Group employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finanzas industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

7K reviews
2.0
Jan 25, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I never have to work overtime unlike other jobs I've had. Pay is good. Some offices are really lovely, like the Bristol harbor side office.

Cons

Leadership is pretty stupid in all honesty. They're in the middle of a "big transformation" but keep restructuring before any of the previous changes or plans can start to hit the ground and show results. The 40% office mandate only makes sense if you can go in and have one person meetings to collaborate, but often you're going in to sit on teams calls and you can't hear yourself think because everyone else around you is sitting on teams calls. Very slow to adapt to new technology, too scared to properly implement copilot. Lots of legacy systems and you'll find nothing has been implemented properly. Lots of meetings about meetings. In all honesty, it's very much a boys club too. All the senior positions are white men, barely any diversity especially for women in senior teams. I would say it's actually quite a hostile environment for women with the rollback of compressed hours. I think the worst thing about this place is that they just don't care. Half the decisions that are made are because they want us to quit rather than paying redundancies.

1.0
Mar 1, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits package is generous including 30 days annual leave and 15% pension contribution. The people are great. Every day flexibility, if you need to run an errand during the day, you have the freedom to do that around meetings.

Cons

One of the companies values is "People-First - we put people first to go further for customers. We listen and care for people as individuals. We go the extra mile to help customers, colleagues and communities feel more supported, in control and confident about their future" This is how the senior leaders have lived this value over the last year: 1. Announced a mandated return to office, for 40% of your time, without providing any evidence for the benefits they claimed. This includes people who were hired remotely, the other side of the country from the team they work with, who now have to travel into their local office, with no one they know, because of "collaboration". 2. At the same time, announced removing consolidated working arrangements that had been in place to support those caring for sick family members, newborn babies, etc. They replaced this with a policy putting a limit on the length of these agreements. There are now people having to ration their holiday allowance to use to take time off to care for family members. 3. In response to the above two announcements, thousands of people spoke out against it in the comments on the article, but employee's concerns were brushed off as people "struggling with change". 4. A follow-up announcement included all senior leaders piling into the comments section voicing their support for the changes, while replying in very passive aggressive ways to people who didn't, asking those people to have a "chat to understand why they feel this way". This led to people not feeling comfortable sharing their opinion. 5. Subsequent announcements had comments turned off, preventing people voicing their opinion. 6. A survey was released promising to 'listen to colleagues' on this subject, which included loaded questions forcing you to pick between 'I care about the company' and 'I don't see the value in the changes'. 7. Contract changes, removing any right to redundancy packages if you reject a role they arbitrarily think you're suitable for, even if it's nothing to do with your skillset and requires a complete change in your career aspirations. 8. Changes to restrict internal applications. Managers are notified automatically if you apply for another role and you can only apply to one role at a time. This will heavily dissuade some colleagues from applying and enables managers to prevent you moving roles if it's not in their interest. 9. Pay increases have been significantly below inflation. This is constantly eroding employees buying-power, during a cost of living crisis, while selling it as a positive thing we should be grateful for and the bank also announcing a 57% increase to pre-tax profits. 10. Locking in a two year pay deal, passing the risk of a significantly volatile economic environment onto employees. 11. Disingenuously using PR and spin that a political would be proud of on all internal announcements. Including one off payments into year on year salary comparisons. Using forecasts from the BOE in their announcements to staff around pay to make the offer look competitive, but then just a few days later releasing their own forecasts via a company report that were higher. 12. Re-worked some offices to be open plan unproductive hell-holes. Conveniently, senior leaders have their own private and quiet offices, where they don't have to deal with the sensory insanity around them while still trying to focus on work. Due to all of the above employee morale is at an all time low. Charlie Nunn in a recent all-colleagues call brushed this off as a 'minority' of people feeling that way, but I haven't met a single colleague who isn't feeling deflated and under appreciated because of everything that's happened. In a single year the senior leadership team has destroyed the morale, trust and goodwill of a workforce that's taken years to build.

1.0
May 17, 2023

Used to be good, now looking to leave

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Stable career - good share scheme

Cons

LBG used to be a flexible place to work, I had a good work/life balance and pay was ok (despite being less than some other banks). The work life balance was the real selling point to me, however as you will have seen from other reviews, the CEO announced a few weeks ago a 2 day minimum in the office, and a pilot to remove compressed hours. As I’m sure a great many people will, when the next share options mature I’ll be looking to leave. I could previously see myself working for this company for the next 5 years, probably longer. Now the reality is that if I ever needed compressed hours, I probably won’t be able to get that approved by management. I’ve seen so many colleagues have successful career by utilising compressed hours, whether that is for childcare, other caring responsibilities or simply wanting a different way of working to a standard 9-5. I used to think that I could have a successful career and start a family, but now it seems if I want both of those things, Lloyds don’t want me

Viewing 19 - 21 of 7,477 Reviews

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