Avoid if you're coming with experience - Anonymous employee Procter & Gamble Employee Review

1.0
1 Aug 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- compensation and benefits is really good, typically higher than market. - staff sales roughly 2-3x a year - flex work arrangements (WFH and flex hours)

Cons

- toxic culture. There is a clique mentality and you will likely not be or feel included in many instances be it for during or after work hour events. Management is also part of this clique. They are aware and enabling it. More often that not, those fresh grad hires / intern converts are preferred for many things. Sometimes you get treated as "less" since you had more experience coming into a role than a fresh grad. - Bias. Preference for ingrown talent (fresh grads/ converts) and also for those who are politically inclined. If you don't play politics you get iced out. - your career depends on who your manager is not you. No matter what they say about delivering results to get promotion, thats just one piece of the puzzle. Your manager needs to back you and give you the limelight show case your work to upper management. If you get a manager that cares more about them looking good, that they are able to manage the team and load well, good luck. They're unlikely to help develop you and your career (because why would they want a performer to go to other teams?). You need to drive career conversations, rub shoulders with those in power (aka politics) to get anything done. - Quiet cutting of people. They have been moving jobs overseas for a few years and with the recent 7,000 job cuts, they're super secretive about who gets cut. Handover is done under guise. - lack of guidance. they give you additional work or roles/hat/ responsibility whatever they call it. But little to no guidance. You need to go figure it out. Google is your best friend in this case.

Explore other reviews about Procter & Gamble

5.0
23 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

training in in depth, training on job, basic star interview questions good company, stable benefits are somewhat cheap

Cons

training can be a lot, you have about 1-2hr presentations biweekly where you get tested on different aspects of the plant, like steam system, water system, utilities etc, training can last up to 6 months paid once a month, irregular times on call, may have to work weekends depending on machines work long shifts, sometimes up to 16 hours depending on how machines run, expected to be at work by 6am for safety meetings, 5am sometimes depending on the site you work at, expected to stay if machines run poorly can be demanding- most entry level managers are fresh out of college and expected to train and manage individuals who have worked at the company for decades not very easy to change departments, takes a couple of years no matching 401k, they have their own profit sharing thing, if you quit before 3-4 years at the company, you lose the money

3.0
19 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Many intelligent people who are experts in their fields who are willing to help and provide advice (if they have time). Decent benefits and pay.

Cons

I mentioned time because many people are stretched and overworked. Work life balance is pretty bad and shows no signs of improvement. A lot of this can be attributed to near useless management. Every project is treated as absolute maximum priority but can still be dropped at a moment's notice. Work processes are horribly cumbersome and slow. Even small changes require many approvals but there are endless demands to "move faster".

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