Mintel Reviews

3.5

53% would recommend to a friend

(602 total reviews)

Matthew Nelson

50% approve of CEO

49% positive business outlook

Mintel has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 602 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Mintel 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

602 reviews
2.0
16 Jun 2017

Lordy am I glad that’s over

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Whenever the office hosts a client event, leftover food is shared with employees in the kitchen - There is a mediocre, overpriced sandwich shop located in the building lobby - Missing phones/jewelry are promptly turned into HR - If you survive a year, you are rewarded with a fleece jacket - Access to M&Ms in the lobby, which can be used sparingly to “address the occasional sweet tooth” - Job itself was good - if you enjoyed writing book reports as a kid, this is the opportunity to basically do that full time as an adult under the guise of “research”. The company does offer some real benefits, including strong work-life balance such as the ability to work from home.

Cons

For starters, the open concept office space breeds germs and people are constantly sick through winter, which isn’t a deal breaker but it does get annoying. However, the biggest con is that despite having regular reviews, Mintel does not give employees annual pay raises - nothing, not even cost of living. Management generally thinks the strong work-life balance will make up for this, but very high turnover suggests it's not working. To get a salary increase, one must make a lateral move, receive a promotion, or work on the food team. Despite some departments supposedly having established career paths, the requirements for moving up the career path are murky at best. Managers were actually told that they couldn't share the promotion requirements with employees, making it hard to know what skills you need to work on in order to actually get promoted. Promotions are also very budget-driven and not performance-based. In other words, they’ll tell you that if you do XYZ you’ll get a promotion, but the reality is you might have to wait a full year until the next fiscal budget in order to get that promotion. Also, promotions are basically title changes, no change in responsibilities, so you aren’t actually boosting your resume. Essentially, these career paths were created to give the illusion of career growth, even though growth doesn't actually exist. Additionally, because of high turnover, managers are friendly with their direct reports and avoid confrontation, but this friendliness means that they rarely provide the constructive criticism that people need to improve their performance. As a result, people can be clueless as to whether they are a high performer or if they’re struggling. The Mintel culture is also OK for some, but not for everyone. There's a set of Mintel lifers who thrive at being big fish in a small pond, and seem to be constantly patting each other on the back. If you manage to slip into this “in-crowd” you’ll be taken care of at the company. If not, working there can be awful.

2.0
11 Sept 2019

All the insecurity of a startup with the bureaucracy of corporate

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Decent medical benefits. Some great people - a few of them in leadership. CEO is approachable and engaged. Some work from home/flex time - varies depending on responsibilities. IT and HR are friendly, responsive and efficient. Friday Happy Hours. Time flies by quickly because it's so frenzied. I think the company is profitable, but you wouldn't know it from all the budget concerns.

Cons

Reactionary, immature, unprofessional behavior from the highest levels of management – leadership jokes that it's the millennials, but smart hard working professionals come from every generation. People behave the way they are treated, and here, almost everyone who is not at the top is treated like a novice. No development plans past generic onboarding, so if you can't afford the time/tuition to invest your own development, your career will stall here. Management plays favorites, but be careful – you can fall out of esteem at any time for no reason. Cliques, unfocused business 'plan', inefficient work space - overcrowded, not enough meeting rooms or bathrooms or space to breathe and hear your own thoughts, penny-pinching (which is an understatement – the reimbursement policy is archaic), under market pay, dysfunctional atmosphere. The list goes on. The turnover is tremendous, so there's no reason to invest in the great people who are just going to get fed up with the revolving door of colleagues and leave.

3.0
18 Feb 2024

Times they are a-changing

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Employee benefits: remote work, flexi-time, dental insurance, Most Valued People recognition, YuLife app vouchers, and more…

Cons

Mintel went through *2* rounds of redundancies in 2023 to restructure the business, and there’s no reassurance from leadership that there won’t be any further in the near future. Despite all the talk about saving costs across the business and making sure resources are being used efficiently, they threw an expensive Christmas party that nobody really *needs*. Employees who were there for more than 10 years were made redundant, yet the company is wasting resources and time on ERGs and EDI projects that appeal to a minority of staff and are really just for show and good PR. Talk about priorities and company culture, eh? The CEO seems earnest and motivated, but has shown serious lack of tact in critical moments last year, which was really sad to see.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 602 Reviews

Glassdoor has 659 Mintel reviews submitted anonymously by Mintel employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Mintel is right for you.