Philips reviews

3.8

73% would recommend to a friend

(10,495 total reviews)
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Roy Jakobs

74% approve of CEO

55% positive business outlook

Philips has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 10,495 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Philips employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Industrie manufacturière industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

10K reviews
5.0
Mar 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Caring for complete people internally and world ecosystem. Focus on making lives better with purposeful impact worldwide. Changes happening as around the world but continue to see push to promote from within.

Cons

Many levels of processes, however after working at a company where the processes were bypassed causing further delays down the line. I see and understand the purpose.

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Philips Response
3mo
Thank you for highlighting our positive culture and impact. We also value your constructive feedback regarding our processes and IT support, and encourage you to share your suggestions with your manager or HR. Once again, thank you for your contributions and wish you all the best.
5.0
Feb 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good people and infrastructure. Using old technology but doing great software to help people around the world.

Cons

Spent a lot of time planning all features and more time in software documentation.

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Philips Response
3mo
Thank you for your review. We are proud of our mission to help people around the world, and it is great to hear you appreciate the team and infrastructure that support it. We’re sorry for any difficulties you may have encountered. Your feedback helps us strengthen our commitment to providing growth and development opportunities for everyone on our team. Once again, thank you for your contributions and wish you all the best.
1.0
Feb 26, 2026

Stay away - Horrible Place

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Well-known brand in medical devices

Cons

This place often runs on the illusion of fairness. There’s a lot of emphasis on policies, structure, and people-first values, but in practice outcomes can depend heavily on individual manager discretion. Many of the formal processes exist, but when it matters most, they tend to be interpreted as guidelines rather than consistently applied standards. A major challenge is inconsistency. The same behavior can be interpreted very differently depending on who is doing it. Pushback, ambiguity, or missed context may be overlooked or even seen as confidence in some cases, while in others it is labeled as a performance issue. Without clearly defined expectations upfront, this creates a system where interpretation replaces alignment. As a person of color, I experienced a higher burden to demonstrate competence and greater scrutiny around competence and working style. These differences are often subtle rather than explicit, but they accumulate over time. Tone, intent, and delivery may be evaluated differently, while others are given more initial benefit of the doubt. This creates an environment where you feel the need to repeatedly prove yourself rather than being trusted at baseline. Cultural alignment also plays a significant role. Team dynamics and informal culture can reflect a narrow set of shared backgrounds and interests, which can make it harder for those outside that mold to integrate. When that alignment isn’t there, it can be reframed as a performance or communication gap rather than recognized as a difference in style. Manager-level discretion has a large impact on outcomes. Expectations are not always clearly defined in advance, and in some cases are clarified only after issues are formally documented. This makes it difficult to calibrate early and creates a perception that narratives can be shaped retrospectively rather than collaboratively. In a quality and compliance-driven environment, raising concerns should be encouraged. However, there are instances where pushing for process adherence or calling out gaps can be perceived as friction rather than accountability, which discourages open dialogue. Frequent reorganizations, layoffs, and shifting priorities add to the instability. While decisions are positioned as business-driven, at the individual level they can feel opaque. Benefits are another gap. For a company that positions itself as people-focused, healthcare plans are relatively high deductible with limited coverage compared to peers.

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Philips Response
3mo
Thank you for taking the time to write such a detailed and candid review. While we appreciate your recognition of our brand, reading about your experience is deeply concerning to us. At Philips, we strive to foster a culture of respect, inclusion, and accountability; any form of unprofessionalism or public embarrassment of employees is contrary to our values. We take your feedback seriously and strongly encourage you to raise your concerns through our confidential Speak Up channel (https://secure.ethicspoint.eu/domain/media/en/gui/100518/index.html). Thank you once again, wishing you a good journey.
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