Grubhub Reviews

3.2

47% would recommend to a friend

(1,962 total reviews)

Howard Midgal

28% approve of CEO

22% positive business outlook

Grubhub has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 1,962 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Grubhub employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
27 May 2018

Political and immature

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

– Unlimited PTO – Supportive, friendly peers to learn a great deal from – Learning stipend – Good work/life balance – 401(k) match – Equity – Lunch on Fridays +$18 weekly on the platform – Peer-level willingness to try new processes, collaborate – Dedicated research team

Cons

This company has made smart acquisitions and partnerships as a first-mover, which increase its revenue, value, and appeal. But inside, it was incredibly damaging for those of us who wanted to collaborate and solve for real problems beneath leaders who didn’t know how or want to do either of those things. Despite high turnover, an inability to deliver basic features after spending years on them, re-building features on the same platform, and knowledge of bullying and harassment, the company has not made changes in leadership where it matters and instead has gone through its regular 1.5-year cadence of re-org and shifting to hide the damage (and protect those responsible because they have trouble hiring to replace them). There is zero accountability because the ability to safely give feedback about your boss no longer exists. Execs only seek input from directors, a few of which are sycophants and prone to gossip. In Product (product, ux research, design), many leaders are devoid of soft skills, don’t foster growth, and don’t understand employees’ skill sets. Some seemed to have no qualifications for their position, whatsoever. Initially I empathized over the pressure they faced and their learning curve as the company scaled rapidly. But, true personalities came out with that pressure. At least three leaders hid insecurities by: not letting their teams make decisions, hiding their day-to-day activities or withholding information, preventing team discussion by pushing conversation into 1:1s, blaming their team for their own backfired decisions, creating false feedback as a punishment mechanism, and firing or running out those who challenged them. It is the luck of the draw if you join. There are a few good leaders who don’t breed this toxicity. In my opinion, these leaders were still too passive to call out the damage being done by others. Problems exist beyond leadership. PM waste endless hours filing regression bugs (there is no real QA team). Simple changes are blocked by cross-team dysfunction. Finance often blocked delivery due to meaningless metrics. The Design org has struggled as subservient to Product leadership, who easily micro-manage design work because of the top-down approach and a lack of advocacy for design as an equal contributor. Positions for senior design leadership remain unfilled for years. Many designers and product people never saw work delivered, anyway, due to a shortage of engineers and inability of the company to prioritize.

1.0
9 Jan 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are still a few really good people left, but those are almost all on the way out. Renovated modern offices in Chicago and New York. As expected, lots and lots and lots of free food Reasonable stock awards that has performed well until recently

Cons

Where to begin? Thoughtful, intelligent, leaders who cared about people have all left the company. What’s left is nothing but insecure people who look to curry favor with either the CEO (Matt Maloney) or CFO (Adam DeWitt). If you’ve ever had the (dis)pleasure of interacting with either of them, you’ll find them to be some of the most conceited and arrogant men around. The lack of regard for any opinions other than their own is frightening to say the least. They care about nothing except the value of their stock, and suffer from wanting to appear like they know everything... when in reality, they are so far removed from the real business and organization, they are strangers in their own building. They have cultivated the behavior in the levels below where everyone strives to win their approval without consideration for others or what is truly best for the company. A new development is a strong lack of diversity at the leadership level - how many non-white males are left at the VP and above? If you audit - how many VP+ females have left in the past few months?

1.0
30 May 2016

Bad Leadership

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I have been working at GrubHub for some time and it was super awesome when I first started. The work was interesting, the technology was good, they pay and benefits were good, and most importantly my co-workers were awesome.

Cons

For the past year or so there have been a lot of people that have worked here a long time jumping ship. For a bit I kind of ignored it and assumed that most of them were hitting that 3-4 year mark and had an itch to do something more. Then some more odd things started happening such all but a couple people from recruiting were fired at the same time, just so we could hire someone from Orbitz and he could bring his team. Time went on and more and all of the sudden those that didn't decide to leave were now being forced out or outright fired (no logical reasons why). New leadership seems to be targeting anyone who has worked there for multiple years and now is resorting to directly intimidating teams. The leadership beyond project and team leads here is horrible and I would not recommend working here to anyone.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 1,962 Reviews

Glassdoor has 3,230 Grubhub reviews submitted anonymously by Grubhub employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Grubhub is right for you.