Cybersource Reviews

3.7

70% would recommend to a friend

(119 total reviews)

Rob Cameron

100% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

Cybersource has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 119 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Cybersource employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Finance industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

119 reviews
1.0
31 Oct 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good benefits package, good equipment, modern office with good facilities, good name to have on CV, easy to get by / be anonymous if you keep a low profile (if that's what you are looking for)

Cons

There is a general anti-European sentiment in this US run Visa Inc acquisition business. Executive level employees think it's appropriate to publicly mock and scapegoat European nationalities in company wide meetings where HR and other senior management sycophantically pander the insensitive, careless, offensive ramblings of an out-of-touch executive team. Most US employees talk down to any non-American colleagues. This filters down to middle management who have an appalling attitude in dealing with the diversity in the people they employ. Petty, hypocritical, deceitful managers constantly play games with each other and their subordinates. They lie to people in interviews about the jobs they are recruiting for and they force senior personnel interviewing with them to employ similar tactics. Middle management are allowed to run riot, constantly infighting, exhibiting favouritism / undue bias to friends and family, taking credit for other people's work after creating competitions between departments, awarding promotions and bonuses not based on performance but to those who will support and aid their personal career progression. Managers will come into work intoxicated, unfit for work, gamble online whilst at work (circumventing company security measures), spend the day playing games or films on tablets, having sexual intercourse in the toilets, hitting on employees, creating rumours about colleagues, using HR procedures to attack "rival" managers, bullying people into submission or managing out anyone who did not silently allow them to go about their business. HR are incompetent and allow this to occur as they are employed to support management and not all employees. Management also coerce their subordinates into breaking company policy so that they can later use this as leverage to forcibly eject employees if needs be. HR will maintain face by sending managers on training courses when these issues are reported but there is no evidence of incompetent managers being handled in the ways most befitting. HR are still struggling in such a corporate environment, after coming from a smaller business, and hold exit interviews in public places, prohibiting the use of the company or parent company's name in public in order to intimidate exiting employees. Additionally, upon discovering that exiting employees have a reason to possibly sue or make their practices public knowledge, they attempt to bribe individuals with financial "assistance" when leaving the company. HR also selectively employ their procedures based on the pay grade of the employee in question; claiming to low-level employees that something is zero-tolerance and beyond their control but when the same indiscretion, or worse, is committed by a high-level employee, discretion is needed (as not all disciplinary procedures apply to executive level staff). There's a company joke stating the management are the mafia and when they make mistakes, they get promoted. Generally speaking, employees are financially motivated, meaning that they are driven by the metrics that define their bonus packages rather than real business needs or the conviction to do a good job and work collaboratively.You cannot blame individuals though as it's a company culture problem, which can only be controlled by the executive team. Managers compete in petty games for scarce resources under ridiculously stringent security mandates from the parent company who just do not understand the business that they bought, or software development. Middle management, most institutionalised since the start of the company, are not equipped to deal with the larger Visa Inc organism and consequently take political approaches to everything based off their own insecurities or ambitions. Staff are allowed to not do their jobs properly as long as they do not challenge management; anyone willing to denounce management will be bullied or "managed out"; practices which have the full backing of HR who facilitate and encourage this. The resources given to staff to do their jobs, with the exception of equipment, is not acceptable; training is poor, access to systems is poor, management support is poor and inter-departmental collaboration can be appalling. One individual can make little impact in such a monstrous business environment especially if they have the conviction to not play games and treat people fairly.

2.0
2 Jul 2014

Mixed bag, and not in a good way

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Premium benefits thanks to being part of the Visa corporation, some very bright and skilled engineers.

Cons

Lack of empowerment working under some managers and technology wise opportunities to get exposure to cutting edge are very patchy at best. Unfortunate politics in some circles causing distrust and negative atmosphere at times.

3.0
18 Jun 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Great people in each department - A large portfolio of products and great merchant brands to with - Flexibility, when you need time, you get it and that is important - Great benefits - Lots of travel (pre-covid)

Cons

- Extremely slow product development, the company will bring a new product in, but not tie it to other products and it becomes silo and useless - Lots of high level leadership changes which makes it difficult to understand the long term goal, there has also been a lot of poor management figures that disappear overnight - Local offices & management have no control, all decisions are made in the US and very difficult to work in an environment which is not tailored to your landscape, most of all in sales - The company has great benefits due to being owned by Visa however they have a huge gap in culture and keeping up to date with the industry - Huge gap in wages, between genders and territories and when compared to the industry - Red tape on code releases, meaning very difficult to help merchants with changes when it can take a year - Everything is delayed constantly which makes it hard to trust what you are told, I do not blame management directly but everything takes forever to either get approved or reviewed. - Career progression only comes if you really put your head down and fight for it, there is no clear path to progress unless you graft

Viewing 1 - 3 of 119 Reviews

Glassdoor has 132 Cybersource reviews submitted anonymously by Cybersource employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Cybersource is right for you.