Euromonitor Reviews

3.6

65% would recommend to a friend

(845 total reviews)

Tim Kitchin

66% approve of CEO

47% positive business outlook

Euromonitor has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 845 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Euromonitor 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

845 reviews
1.0
3 Nov 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible working hours Relaxed dress code Friendly staff

Cons

Incompetent management that have been entrenched over 20+ years (they are not going anywhere and nothing is changing). Stupid initiatives that always add more work and lead to less revenue for salesreps. Staff turnover is obviously very high - but they never want to talk about that since all that matters is they kpis - which funnily enough seem to matter more to them than their revenue targets. One directional decision making from the top with constant roll out of increasingly pointless initiatives that do not improve the bottom line or help staff. It's never managements fault - its the sales reps. No accountability and if you could see how how management coast you'd tear your hair out (constant half days, wondering around doing nothing all day and having meetings for the sake of having meetings to tick their kpi box and show they've done their job). Promotion process is a joke - peanut pay rises and they actually have a board of senior management who have no visibility on your day to day attitude or performance but sit around looking at how many contacts you've added (really) and use this as an excuse to justify why they can't promote you. Terrible commission if you don't hit target - and considering 5-7% hit target a year the odds are not in your favour.

1.0
26 Jul 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

It's an established business, not a startup, as the leadership team often refer to it. Good brand, good product and talented people across the business. New product development. Flexi hours, nice office, good location Low pay compared to the industry average but very reasonable working hours

Cons

Sales Leadership: Sellers are overwhelmed by the internal complexity of their jobs. The company has finally increased sales support resources in the last few years, but the execution and timing were appalling. More support means sellers must process more information, involve more internal stakeholders, and engage with more technological touchpoints. Sales reps either ignore it or are forced to make trade-offs and this increases the cost of sales, places pressure on margins and raises cycle times. Feedback from reps or mid-management is hardly ever taken into consideration, which increases friction and staff turn-over. Middle managers have no real influence or autonomy, never achieve over-inflated targets and often earn peanuts compared to reps. A great example is ABC team - have they got any managers left? No transparency and eroding corporate culture. This is predominantly driven by several factors: CEO's focus has shifted from taking the existing business to new levels of growth to new product development. Strategic and operational priorities were left in the hands of highly incompetent people with personal agendas. No real senior executive accountability. VPs of sales are mostly focused on expanding their areas of influence whether through assuming more responsibilities or promoting their loyalists to positions of influence. This means that the company suffers not only from inefficiencies in decision making, it tampers with business growth prospects, successful delivery of overarching growth strategy and erodes what's once was a great corporate culture. It also stops talented people being promoted to lead important business functions. Although career development strategy has been rolled out, many roles have been created which aren't necessary. People don't take this seriously because a change in your job title with no alteration in responsibilities isn't growth or development. Meritocracy principles need to be introduced. Stop favoritism and sexism - this is clearly evident through official salary reporting and general sentiment in the organisation.

1.0
2 Nov 2018

Beware of fake 4/5 stars reviews

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A reasonable location in central London

Cons

- This company is now a completely different business to just a couple of years ago becoming extremely corporate in the process. - The nice environment and friendly culture have all gone. People with real expertise and talent are increasingly being pushed out while more and more poorly paid graduates are hired. - Sadly, the office environment is quite toxic, and the overall atmosphere is rather tense making it a depressing place to work.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 845 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,090 Euromonitor reviews submitted anonymously by Euromonitor employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Euromonitor is right for you.