Shell reviews

4.0

74% would recommend to a friend

(13,617 total reviews)
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Wael Sawan

63% approve of CEO

62% positive business outlook

Shell has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 13,617 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Shell employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Énergie et exploitation des ressources naturelles industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

14K reviews
2.0
Apr 11, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

well you can still have a lavish Expat life for ages moving between London, Hague or Houston. you can do nothing and being promoted as a way to move you out you career will be fine if you are yes person

Cons

to many people with no real tasks keeping each other busy indecisive and slow managmnet no real consequence management you are not much if you are not Dutch, British or American

1.0
Apr 5, 2016

Bad company to be with

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Coworkers were nice at least

Cons

No transparency, misleading and lying to employees, handling the downturn very poorly. Morale is terrible at the office.

3.0
Mar 30, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good compensation and benefits package. - Relatively well established processes and procedures. - Varied career opportunities and system in place to apply for jobs internally. - Flexibile work arrangements (opportunity to work from home depending on the role) - Opportunities to travel. - System in place to report violations of business principles and code of conduct. - Promotes diversity and inclusiveness. - Promotes safety and wellness. - Opportunity to work with diverse group of people. - Believes in honesty, integrity and respect for people as its core values

Cons

- In sales, the focus is often short term (annual performance). - Too much focus on individual reward and recognition which often stifle collaboration and teamwork. - Annual performance management process with forced ranking. - Limited senior roles doing local jobs. If you want progression, you need to do regional or global roles. - Susceptibility to succumbing to the "not invented here" syndrome since most assignments only last 4 years and staff wanting to move up would have tendency not to continue what was started by the predecessor even if they are working but instead develop new things. This is apparent in lubricants marketing where there is hardly any sustainable product positioning. - In Lubricants - Tendency to hire too many experienced marketers from FMCG companies who hardly make an effort to understand their products and the business first to come up with strong marketing programs and campaigns but instead rely too much on events and promotions. - Tendency to develop a culture of "sucking it up to the boss" and breeding a group of "Yes men" at senior management levels stifling generation of new and/or opposing ideas. - Believes that promoting gender diversity is just all about hiring women with limited programs in place to make the workplace more women-friendly especially to those not willing to sacrifice their family life for the sake of their careers. - Understaffed front-line human resource staff. - Becoming an organization of fiefdoms led by leaders promoting their own agenda and each wanting to "look good".

Viewing 292 - 294 of 13,617 Reviews

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