Bullhorn reviews

3.8

68% would recommend to a friend

(719 total reviews)
avatar

Art Papas

78% approve of CEO

64% positive business outlook

Bullhorn has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 719 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Bullhorn employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

719 reviews
1.0
Apr 3, 2026

Talented Teams, but Compensation is Driving Turnover

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Bullhorn has genuinely great people. The culture at the team level is collaborative, supportive, and full of smart, capable individuals who care about doing good work. The product itself is strong in many areas and continues to provide real value to clients.

Cons

Compensation is increasingly out of step with both the market and the expectations placed on employees. Annual raises and promotion increases fail to keep pace with inflation or market rates, making it difficult to view long-term growth as sustainable. Recent organizational changes have also led to a loss of institutional knowledge in key areas. As experienced leaders and long-tenured employees exit, gaps in product understanding and historical context are becoming more noticeable, impacting both execution and decision-making. There is also a largely unspoken expectation of extended hours and unpaid overtime to meet performance goals, which contributes to ongoing burnout. While layoffs may have aligned the business to current needs, they were implemented in a way that left gaps in both expertise and delivery capacity, placing additional strain on remaining team members.

avatar
Bullhorn Response
1mo
Hi - I cannot tell you we care about our employees, (we definitely do), I can only show our employees through our actions. And clearly, we're missing that mark for you. I can't tell what function you are in based on your review, but I would love to meet confidentially so I can understand more. Non salaried roles cannot work unpaid overtime, so if that's happening somewhere, I will address it for sure. I'd love to meet and since you're an employee, please grab time on my calendar! Let's work together here! - Kelley Morse, CPO
1.0
Apr 2, 2026

So much for being human

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote Really great people to work with "Unlimited" pto Plenty of resources to help you achieve, great way to get your foot in the door entry level

Cons

Processes with feedback needs to be reviewed because it’s a one way conversation Lack of growth opportunities despite leadership getting every opportunity in the world while doing nothing to assist lower level employees with their actual day to day Constant layoffs and restructuring cause larger workloads, and leadership encourages you to make a competition out of outperforming your peers instead of resolving the problem Micromanagement by leadership Extremely low pay and bonuses, laughable merit increases No appreciation by leadership. You are treated as disposable even if you perform and will not get any acknowledgement from anyone except your peers "Unlimited" pto but if you try to use it you are looked down upon

avatar
Bullhorn Response
1mo
I appreciate you taking the time to write a review. This one stings a little, because a lot of what you're describing runs counter to what we want Bullhorn to be. The feedback about growth, recognition, and compensation is something we take very seriously. While we benchmark compensation to stay competitive, and have invested heavily in career pathing, enablement, and recognition over the past several months, it is clear those efforts aren't landing the way they should for everyone. That matters to us. Ensuring everyone has a clear opportunity to grow and feel valued will continue to be a primary focus. Support has historically been an incredible launchpad for careers within the company, and we are fully committed to making sure that remains true. The part about not feeling "being human" as a core value? We have to earn that every day, not just claim it. Please know we're listening. If you are still with the company, I would genuinely love to connect with you directly, please feel free to grab time on my calendar. - DJ Yoder, SVP Global Support
2.0
Mar 20, 2026

Don't fall for it

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I've made lifelong friends and have endless respect for the people I worked with. In the good times, unlimited PTO was great and I felt supported in using that benefit. It's highly dependent on your team whether it's a benefit or a scam for you because Bullhorn refuses to follow other leaders in the industry that set a minimum for unlimited PTO usage. I would say remote work, but I speculate Bullhorn has remained remote-first despite industry shifts just to prevent employees from organizing effectively. Keep that in mind that it's really a trade off, though it is an excellent benefit!

Cons

Bullhorn isn't different from every other company in this era of PE extracting as much and delivering as little as they can with every company that embraces this model. This is what they do and realistically they don't have to change a thing. It's all business. My issue is that at least other companies pay you more and make you work a lot less to deal with it. Bullhorn used to have a fun and vibrant culture, great benefits, and of course that incredible customer experience fly wheel that's showed all the time, even when remote and globally dispersed. It made the pay trade off worth it because you felt respected, valued and like you made an impact for customers and for your colleagues. There was a true career pipeline and you got to see a lot of people move up and blossom during their time there. I happily referred several high impact people in my time there! In the last few years, that took a turn. In my experience, they want to hire non US based contractors, try to use gen Al and agents, and run incredibly lean as much as possible. My team was asked to give up industry standard tools and project management software licenses and use inferior tools or spreadsheets to cut costs. Lots of $ and employee time for endless re-implementations and organizational changes wasted at the whims of whatever new leaders were coming in and wanting to shake things up to buy time. There were rarely well-communicated strategic directives to align to because it seemingly changed all the time and weren't aligned across all parts of the business. As a manager it was demeaning to be asked to try to communicate and support that dysfunction to smart ICs. Not to mention stagnant wages no matter your performance. The incredible customer and employee experiences are not the focus anymore; they're annoying hurdles to more money to feed the Private Equity beast. I had been through that cycle several times before in my career at BH but this last one felt particularly bleak and I became disillusioned with the company I once said I'd happily retire from someday if I got to keep my job that long. Maybe with the pace and opportunity now that they've had multiple large restructurings/layoffs and voluntary exits, it's a good chance for someone early in their career who buys into the 2010s Lean In ethos to move up quickly, though I don't think that sort of career pipeline is supported anymore. Otherwise if you are talented and experienced I don't see why you'd want to join in for so much uncertainty and so little in return. It's not as flexible as older reviews make it out to be because now you will have the work of 3 people and a constant sense of urgency pushing down on you from every direction. Any attempt to set professional boundaries or point to an established process will be undermined by your leadership or the Core Values will be weaponized against you. I get there's nuance for certain exceptions, but not everything can be an exception and still go at the same quality and speed and attitude, and it's a poor way to run an organization. So, good luck! If you don't care about any of that and don't value work-life balance, you'll probably love it, and good for you!

avatar
Bullhorn Response
3w
Nothing I say here will change your mind about how you feel about us & leaving the company. I want all of our employees to leave here and believe they had a good experience, so it's a bummer, but I cannot control how someone chooses to depart. I do wish you great success in your next chapter, and hope that you find the fulfillment that every person deserves. For anyone else who is reading this, I'll say this. One of the key tenants of our Core Values is to give the benefit of the doubt - and that goes both ways. I could argue all the points above, one by one. While it might feel good to do so, it's not productive. As an executive here, responsible for the single most costly & valuable asset we have, our people, my entire day is thinking about how to make this a great place to work. And I love to do that creatively, and with data, and with the collaboration of our people. I care, and my door is always open! - Kelley Morse, CPO
Viewing 16 - 18 of 719 Reviews

Glassdoor has 764 Bullhorn reviews submitted anonymously by Bullhorn employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Bullhorn is right for you.