Tripadvisor reviews

3.5

51% would recommend to a friend

(1,366 total reviews)
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Matt Goldberg

25% approve of CEO

22% positive business outlook

Tripadvisor has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 1,366 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Tripadvisor employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
Mar 11, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good office space and good benefits

Cons

Horrible structure of management in Business listings APAC, the new changed management are very money minded bosses, All the good people and excellent sales people who had passion for trip advisor culture and org. left. The management is currently making this place like a call centre. Lot of dirty politics to climb the ladder. your performance metrics is a secret and you barely have promotions or increment in the business listings department. The decisions are very sudden and you may be asked to leave suddenly. People of higher leadership are asked to report to newbies with lower rank. The management also docent distinguish your effort and penetration to emerging markets what they see is money. when you give low value leads to sales people of course the sale volume will be low. You are not allowed to be creative or create your own customer base, you will have to work on the list they provide. Very unprofessional and no career growth. Have seen 8 people leave in 2 weeks. Sad Situation and hope the management realises that when you value you staff then the staff values you as well.

4.0
Mar 6, 2015

It's Up to You

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits - I'd be hard pressed to find a better benefits package at any company. People - Both old and new, many people I have met here are fantastic and I am proud to work alongside them everyday. Location - State of the art office that is right on Causeway Street, access to public transit with North Station, across from TD Garden, and right alongside the North End. Start-Up Culture Essentials - Ping pong, shuffleboard, 2 kegs, a snack bar, etc.

Cons

There is a fair amount here that others have posted which is accurate. There is also a fair amount here that also qualifies as venting/frustration. (To one reviewer - my soul is not dead and is doing fine ;) )Communication has been my biggest pet peeve and management has improved at addressing that, though cross-department communication is still a work in progress. Compensation could be higher. The bottom line is that when a company transitions from an independent start-up into an alliance with one of the industry leaders and "corporate" changes are made, there are going to be a lot of adjustments, with many of them being extremely challenging and not necessarily suitable for everyone. Again, it's up to whether or not what you are doing on a day-to-day basis is worth it for you.

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Tripadvisor Response
11y
I’m very happy to hear that you continue to enjoy your experience here at FlipKey after being with us for more than 3 years. We are proud to offer a lot of wonderful benefits, which also include a multitude of opportunities for career development through trainings and a tuition reimbursement program. And thank you for your comments regarding our efforts to improve our communications. We are happy to hear that we have made positive strides in that area and it is something that continues to be an important focus for us. As you pointed out, change can be hard for everyone, but I believe change also provides opportunities for growth and challenges. We would appreciate hearing any other ideas or feedback you have, so please feel free to share them either with me or with someone in our Human Resources Department. Thank you, Tracey
2.0
Feb 27, 2015

Disingenuous

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Smart CEO Global leader in the space Great, high-margin, sustainable business model Known and trusted brand worldwide Growing Bright, experienced, talented and motivated colleagues Usually there is good work-life balance, interrupted by bursty but fairly regular insane stretches

Cons

An obsession with measurement leads to missing the bigger point all too often and driving perverse incentives as well as a silo'd, unhelpful org structure. A few examples - a product team wants to experiment with a promising new feature, and suspects it would drive more user engagement. But if that metric has not been previously identified as important or is difficult for someone in sr management to understand, then either the project will get killed or won't be applauded. Meanwhile a minor turn of the screw on a revenue-generating feature will require an all-hands on deck effort ironically without any holistic analysis of the ROI of that effort. In other words, hooray that we raised revenue on that feature by .5% but at what cost (direct cost and opportunity cost)? No one knows, because no one measured it. Further, you have sales or BD teams feverishly optimizing around their singular metric and potentially squandering a customer or partner opportunity for a value trade that is sub-optimal. If teams had better alignment and communication, TA could figure out the best first home for a customer and partner and work out the most logical order to grow that customer and mutual value. Sr management rarely cares about nor addresses this conflicts, it takes a few employees who care about the bigger picture - at direct personal cost to their own short-term success - to effectively do the right thing. Lots of hiring but without any evident positive effect on the process and products. One eng group has grown 2-3x over the past year, and the release process is totally chaotic and broken. Honestly things worked better when we had a few great engineers vs this mess of people all stepping on each other. The company constantly says that it is metrics-driven and a meritocracy, but when a team or an individual delivers on and *exceeds* stated goals (in some instances by 50%-300%), there is still unbelievably wide latitude given to management with annual reviews, awarding bonuses, and advancing employees -- coupled with the most opaque system I have ever witnessed. Zero transparency on the review, comp and bonus process. People should not be shocked during their annual reviews, especially when they over-deliver; they should be thanked and properly compensated. And - it should go without saying - employees should have expectations properly set by managers well ahead of the annual review. Much more training is needed here, and it needs to be pushed aggressively as a cultural norm to have open and host feedback with regularity. Majority of the focus in on a few small teams to eke out teeny tiny improvements to optimize revenue The weekly reports and product reviews talk about +.3% wins and similar micro-steps, which on the one hand makes sense for this relatively mature company, but also is about as dull as dirt in terms of interesting projects for smart people to work on longer term career objectives Promotions are virtually nonexistent, but the company is happy to ask already-busy people to take on additional roles during times of turn over. A lack of interest in retention has led to high turnover by really talented people up and down the seniority spectrum. There has not been a head of HR in well over a year, which speaks volumes about where the priorities and values rest. Lack of any organized effort to integrate acquisitions - teams, products, assets, etc. New opportunities (revenue, tech, partner) have no logical evaluation process or home / team. You could take a promising oppty to 3 different teams without any commitment or next steps from them. As a result, Trip misses out all of the time on being early to market in new areas and then turns around and blames people internally for not being part of the "cool new thing." Also very US-centric sr mgmt team POV. If they have heard of the company or technology personally, then they (sometimes) rally behind it, but if it's huge in a foreign market, good luck getting anyone's attention until it's way too late to structure a substantive agreement.

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Glassdoor has 1,686 Tripadvisor reviews submitted anonymously by Tripadvisor employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Tripadvisor is right for you.