Micromanagement, Humiliation, and No Onboarding - No work life balance - Data product owner Gallagher Employee Review

1.0
27 Sept 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible work setting (remote and hybrid).

Cons

Extremely toxic workplace. The data team leadership shows clear signs of dysfunction, with constant micromanagement and no structured onboarding or training. VPs go as far as spying on employees by monitoring calendars and dictating daily priorities, focusing more on “how” rather than “what” needs to be done. New hires are expected to handle tasks like architecture design without guidance — responsibilities that aren’t even part of the original job description. Interaction and learning from other team members are restricted, and humiliation is common. Leaders seem to enjoy watching employees struggle, only to insult them and accuse them of not grasping basic concepts. If a new employee is struggling, it’s usually because a) they are new, and b) they need proper guidance — which should be a key part of onboarding. In my case, the role I was hired for had already been filled THREE times, with each person leaving within weeks or a few months. I didn't receive proper transition or onboarding. Instead, I was told not to talk to anyone and was expected to figure everything out on my own, while the VP still demanded I become an expert in just two months. Every day was spent dealing with extreme micromanagement.

Explore other reviews about Gallagher

5.0
3 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has a positive and inclusive culture

Cons

There is a poor work life balance

4.0
8 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great work-life balance as a remote employee. Management is approachable and genuinely willing to help when it comes to workload — you never feel like you're on your own.

Cons

Mentorship is largely self-driven. if you don't seek it out yourself, it won't come to you. Systems and internal processes can be slow and tedious, which adds friction to an already fast-paced workload. Compensation does not reflect the complexity or volume of work expected. High performers who are ready for the next step would benefit from clearer, more proactive promotion paths. When that structure is missing, talented people disengage quietly long before they ever leave.

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