BBC Reviews

3.8

71% would recommend to a friend

(3,348 total reviews)
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Matt Brittin

Not enough data to show CEO approval

44% positive business outlook

BBC has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 3,348 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The BBC employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Media and communication industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
4.0
22 Nov 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Great people, I had lots of fun and learned a lot from them. - Great place to start, many opportunities, many people to learn from. - Relaxed environment. - Good equipment. - Flexible time and possibility of working from home. - Looks great in your CV! - Very stable company. - It's really cool to work for TV, you get to see the studios, learn how they deliver the content and learn some trivia no one else knows. - You can move between teams, departments and even types of job. It's difficult, but possible. - Relocation is easy. - There is a BBC club with discounts, language courses, gym, etc. - You can watch anything the BBC has been producing in the past years. - You can access decades of archives (if you make an effort, and if you heave sufficient clearance).

Cons

For starters, the BBC don't usually explain to candidates in London about the "London weighting". This weighting is part of the gross salary, so it is a bonus that will not be "added" to your income, but deducted if you move to another city. The BBC is huge. It means things can be very bureaucratic. The HR department is located in Northern Ireland, and so is some of the IT support. That must be alright for people who live there, but for people elsewhere it's a bit of a stretch to get some help from them. Projects can be badly defined because there are so many people involved and no one is really sure how things will progress. That means that while some projects have far off deadlines, some atypical last-minute requirements appear out of the blue and people have to deal with it. The BBC is divided into Television, Radio and Design and Engineering. D&E normally hires contractors for most projects, and since they are quite competent, they make key decisions some times. And when these decisions are taken unilaterally they can backfire on the permanent staff. It happened several times in my department. There is no proper training for newcomers. While there is a BBC introduction course, it is very generic and you have to figure a lot of your work by yourself unless someone steps in. IT support is not great. It is often time-consuming and stressful. I saw people using their private software licences to work because they couldn't be bothered to ask for support. That's not nice. Salary is below industry standards and the only perks are salary deductible. If you work for the BBC, you don't get a TV licence discount. So if you pay the licence, you pay your own salary... It doesn't make much sense. The BBC has to many managers. I had 7 managers in a hierarchy and 3 transversal managers. Some of them have very mysterious jobs. The BBC's main income is the TV licence. Since an article was published in a newspaper about a party organised by the BBC, they stopped doing events for their employees. So the BBC tends to always attempting to be thrifty. But some times it is too much. For example, they don't invest enough in training. There is some training, but few and far in between. Saving money also leads to debates with unions. The last time it happened (around 2016) they froze all promotions. That can make things very slow in career progression and the only way up is applying for jobs as if you never worked at the BBC before. And that can take some time. BBC software development teams do not normally use agile methodologies, even though they say they do. All in-house software must be wired at some point to a main, central database and it is immense. There is no code re-factoring. Software efficiency is considered less important than making it look nice. Also, the BBC never ever deletes data. There is an endemic paranoia that all data collected is useful, which is not true. BBC's databases tend to infinity. The food halls are a mixed bag. The food halls at New Broadcasting House and Broadcast Centre are expensive and the food isn't great. Access to places like Television Centre, for example, is limited to certain people. TVC has very decent food, though, and it's a block away from BC, but alas, if you work at BC, you can't get into TVC unless you are being invited. The reason being that TVC is not really BBC, it is BBC Studios, a different company. You don't get to travel much between BBC branches, not even within the same city. Only on very special occasions like training or some very important department meeting. That's a bit of a shame, because knowing the other branches could mean more networking, and that can be very useful in a place like BBC.

1.0
8 Aug 2016

HR shambles

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A worldwide recognised brand Other than that no other benefits to working for the BBC as pay is average, benefits are average

Cons

Clueless management working within HR with no HR knowledge Progression based on who your sleeping with or how much your prepared to be a brown nose Too many layers of management a team of 13 will have 3 lead advisors and 1 team manager. Managers spend most days in and out of meetings having meetings about meetings. Roles are simplified in such a way that the job is boring and repetitive. Data entry/ customer service not HR. No real salary grades and they don't actually check references so you can lie about previous earnings in order to earn a higher salary and if you don't give references doesn't matter as they are not chased after a certain time scale. Training is minimal and any training given is of poor quality as the trainer basically reads off slides that could of just been forwarded via email. Not family friendly Unapproachable management

1.0
29 Jul 2018

Worst Year of My Life

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some nice team members. Some interesting perks. Some interesting projects every so often.

Cons

There's nepotism around every corner. Some very hopeless and untalented people sitting in important roles thanks to said nepotism. I bumped into people crying in the toilets almost daily - I was told by managers that this was completely normal, and in fact - something to be expected when working at the BBC. Now if that isn't a red flag... Career progression is at a snail's pace - if at all. And good luck getting a credit for all your hard work - I know other people who only got their first credit after working on shows for THREE YEARS. The culture is toxic, overly competitive, and soul-destroying - if you don't fit the typical "BBC box" you are ostracised and bullied - which is obviously completely ridiculous and backwards. You'd think the company should be encouraging creativity and diversity in order to make the best programmes possible. Instead they just want a room full of "yes-men" - and if you aren't exactly like everyone else, they want nothing to do with you. The majority of managers are unsupportive, patronizing, rude, two-faced, or just plain horrible. I heard horror stories of certain all-female teams that would treat newcomers - especially other women - terribly. I even saw this behavior first hand. It was like something you'd expect to see back in high school, not in a "professional" working environment. One manager took me aside at one point and told me that in order to succeed at the BBC, I should never have friends, get married, or start a family. Basically - sign over your entire life to the place and maybe you'll get somewhere. I wish I was joking. If you're higher up in the company you may have a nicer experience - but if you're in one of the junior roles expect to be treated like dirt (and expected to be thankful for the experience). I met a number of runners and interns during my year at the BBC and they were all burnt out and deeply upset at how they were being treated. They felt like they weren't supported or appreciated in the slightest. The abundance of red tape kills creativity and originality. I often worked shifts until 1am with no overtime pay. There's a general arrogance of the company - due to its history and size - that it's perfect and can do no wrong. To the company - you're just a replaceable cog, and you're made aware of that fact at every opportunity. Money wasting like there's no tomorrow. It honestly made me sick - especially considering that everything is funded by the taxpayer. If people knew about the huge waste of money I saw first-hand on a daily basis - the license fee would be cancelled tomorrow. Within the rest of the industry, the BBC has a god-awful reputation - the general advice is, work there for a year and then leave - which is exactly what I did. All in all, I hated every day I spent at the BBC - and came out of the experience with a lack of confidence, anxiety issues, and a general distaste of corporations. Luckily I got out and found nicer companies and people to work with.

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