Bullhorn Reviews

3.9

70% would recommend to a friend

(720 total reviews)
avatar

Art Papas

80% approve of CEO

64% positive business outlook

Bullhorn has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 720 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Bullhorn employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

720 reviews
1.0
13 Nov 2017

Bullhorn

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Unlimited PTO (when approved by your supervisor)

Cons

Very few growth opportunities for female managers (its a boys club vibe which is typical for the tech space) Management lacks experience and is unable to deliver constructive feedback. Bullhorn is ok when you're drinking the kool-aid but the truth is that there is a rampant sexism/harassment problem that is continuously swept under the rug by HR. Promotions are often political and not earned. As far as compensation goes, Bullhorn will continue to lose exceptional talent to other competitive companies here in St. Louis.

avatar
Bullhorn Response
8y
Its really unfortunate that you’ve left Bullhorn feeling this way. This is not at all reflective of the environment we have worked hard to create. We take any claims of harassment very seriously. We conduct deep and thorough investigations and Bullhorn has always taken immediate action whenever we find misconduct. As a female leader that oversees employee career growth and has been promoted several times myself at Bullhorn, I have to disagree with your comments around the opportunity for women at Bullhorn as I've seen many of my female coworkers' careers take off here over the past 4 years of my tenure.
1.0
19 Mar 2019

Cronysim, Agism

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good product Good benefits and generally competitive comp Relaxed pace--people don't have to work hard at all to be successful. In fact that's why people stay there. It's very easy to be successful without breaking a sweat. At HQ, most people call it quits around 5:30pm.

Cons

Cronyism practiced by senior leadership team along with overt age discrimination. At this years' sales kickoff in front of a large audience of employees, the CRO threw an age-related dig at the oldest person in the Sales org. Several exec team members along with HR people were in the room and there was no response. It's not just a one-off--he's done this before, and it's also not the first time discriminatory or offensive remarks have been made in front of the exec team without any response. And they just announced the promotion of a young sales leader who missed his quota last year after having been given a blank check to hire as much as he wanted and who's known for changing strategy/focus every 1-2 months and keeping poor performers on his team. But he's part of the boys club after being with the company for 14 years, since graduating from college. Meanwhile, older sales leaders who keep hitting their quota with more limited resources stay at the same level. Extremely limited competence at exec team level--half have never worked anywhere else besides Bullhorn, and I don't think any have ever been on exec team in another company. President overtly lies about product roadmap at big customer events year after year and Sales then has to wipe-up from the mess of unfulfilled promises. Exec team members don't practice the values they preach. They spend lots of time spouting off slogans about inclusiveness and how everyone's voice should be heard, but when the rubber hits the road, that's not really what they want--the only voices they want to hear are their own.

avatar
Bullhorn Response
7y
It seems that you’re really frustrated about something that happened to you while you were here. You haven’t shared anything about your personal experience, so I can only speculate. Whatever the case, I’m really sorry that you had such a negative experience at Bullhorn. Regarding the leaders you mentioned, I want to offer a full account: Our CRO made a reference at sales kickoff to the age of an employee with whom he is close. That’s not acceptable behavior at Bullhorn and he immediately realized his mistake, recognizing how the comment could have been perceived and apologized to the employee. Listening and responding to customer feedback is a critical part of our culture. When our President/CTO presents a long term vision to customers, we make it clear that not all of the elements of the presentation will make it into our products, that the explicit purpose of that presentation is to share our vision with customers, gather feedback and adjust our roadmap accordingly. Our track record shows we deliver the vast majority of the vision every year. Most importantly, our Customer Experience Index has increased consistently for the past 20 quarters. We promoted a leader who came in slightly short of his plan in 2018. However, it’s important to recognize that his team's performance increased a staggering 50% over 2017. And, that team achieved 120% of plan in Q1 this year. All three of these people are great leaders who care about their people and improving their leadership skills. Their employee engagement scores are off the charts and customers love working with them. Lastly, Bullhorn makes every effort to balance our leadership across our business. We count among our 185 leaders a wide variety of diversity including age, gender, experience and ethnicity. Of the 6 executives on my Senior Leadership team, 2 have built their careers at Bullhorn while the other 4 have worked at senior levels with companies such as IBM, Harvard, Pega Systems and PWC.
1.0
25 Jun 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I’ve put off writing this for a while, but I miss the Bullhorn I joined in 2021 and while job hunting and trying to find that again, it seems like an uphill battle. At the time, it was the most supportive, non-toxic work environment I had ever experienced. Management genuinely listened, feedback was considered thoughtfully, and there was a clear desire to improve things for both employees and customers. Innovation Week once encouraged us to bring ideas to leadership, and it felt like they truly cared. The culture was strong — morale was high, work-life balance was respected, and there was a running joke about “drinking the Kool-Aid” because it was that great to work there. I never dreaded logging in, even years in. I loved my job, my teammates, the accounts I worked on — so much so that I worked through lunches and sometimes even late, not because it was expected, but because I genuinely enjoyed the work. Management would remind me to take time for myself when they found out. I even visited the office during personal travel — by choice. That’s how invested I was. I had long-term goals. I supported multiple products and was eager to learn more. While product training and documentation weren’t always ideal, improvements were happening, and there was hope for better. Pay was below industry average, yes, but the culture and benefits made it a worthwhile trade-off — at least, back then.

Cons

Then came the shift mid-2023, something changed. Leadership continued pushing a narrative of transparency, especially as anxiety grew around potential layoffs. We were repeatedly told there were no layoffs planned... until one day, without warning, 150 people were gone. That “transparency” felt like a betrayal. It was the first real crack in what had once been a genuinely great place to work. From there, things declined quickly. Support staff, especially on the Enterprise side, went from feeling like trusted problem-solvers to being treated like the root of every issue. Metrics became the entire focus. We were micromanaged down to the order of clicks in Salesforce. Timers were implemented for every screen. Metrics were applied uniformly across wildly different clients and product issues, often by people who had never actually done the job. It didn't matter if you had rapport with a client or deep knowledge of their custom setup — what mattered was that you followed the new formula and hit the numbers. The processes and metrics and expectations changed constantly and those changes were communicated poorly. And when those metrics slipped (as they inevitably did under impossible conditions and constantly changing expectations), the message was loud and clear: “If you don’t like it, leave.” That sentiment was echoed again and again — in meetings, in reviews, and sometimes even in public Glassdoor replies. People were fired, put on action plans that seemed to almost always result in firing, or simply burned out and left. Morale collapsed. Customers noticed. Analysts were demoralized and afraid. Managers who had supported and advocated for us were let go, then talked about disparagingly once gone. Suddenly, it was assumed anyone tied to them must also be a problem. Support went from being scrappy and solution-driven to being boxed into an inflexible, one-size-fits-all workflow — despite the fact that Bullhorn’s own selling point is its complexity and customizability. It makes no sense to handle a five-minute fix the same way you'd approach a multi-month issue involving dev teams and client-specific configurations. The refusal to acknowledge this complexity is hurting both employees and customers. Yes, all companies change. But the speed and depth of Bullhorn’s shift — and ESPECIALLY the way it was handled — was heartbreaking. I held out hope for as long as I could. I wanted to grow there, and I tried hard to adapt and contribute meaningfully to the changes. But none of it mattered. It became clear that hitting arbitrary KPIs mattered more than employee wellbeing or customer outcomes.

avatar
Bullhorn Response
1y
Hi- I just want to start by saying thank you for taking the time to write such a thoughtful review. Just by reading this, I can tell how much you cared, and I'm bummed as well that we couldn't make it through this change and come out the other side together. You're not wrong that we swung too far one way with structure and the unintended consequence of micromanagement, by implementing metrics that didn't match what we were actually trying to do. However, we are eyes wide open on this now, and we have pulled back significantly on the most challenging parts to allow our best analysts to do what they do best for our customers. We are working quickly to find our way to a place of balance in the middle, where we have the right metrics and structure, and also the right autonomy for our employees. We are actively listening and soliciting feedback from those doing the work, and I am confident that we are moving in the right direction. If you ever want to chat live, or think about coming back, the door is open. Otherwise, thank you for this thoughtful feedback and I wish you the best in your next chapter. - Kelley Morse, CPO
Viewing 1 - 3 of 720 Reviews

Glassdoor has 765 Bullhorn reviews submitted anonymously by Bullhorn employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Bullhorn is right for you.