JD Power reviews

3.3

53% would recommend to a friend

(564 total reviews)
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Joshua Peirez

28% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

JD Power has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 564 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The JD Power employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management & Consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

564 reviews
4.0
Oct 8, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good people, access to senior management, interesting work that really does focus on integrity based on independent research into customers in industries around the world

Cons

Bureaucracy increasing -- as well as pressure to make unrealistic numbers in a down market. Smokestacked into to many fiefdoms. For most, few places to go outside of a narrow practice ara.

3.0
Sep 22, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The J.D. Power "brand" is second to none and opens doors.

Cons

It used to be great in the old days. But the new management for Automotive cannot be trusted. They went through a "re-org" at the beginning of the year and everything is becoming unraveled. People are leaving and those of us who remain don't know if we'll have jobs tomorrow. As our talent leaves, J.D. Power grows weaker and the competition grows stronger. This is the result of being part of a publicly traded company. Short-term gain over long-term growth.

2.0
Sep 10, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They pay pretty well, especially if you don't live in CA or NY (cause their pay scales are NY based as a subsidiary of McGraw Hill). There's still a core group of good employees and the cooperation between employees can be pretty good

Cons

Used to be a great company, but since being acquired by McGraw Hill it's been slowing degenerating to another publicly traded sweat shop primarily interested in bottom line. Nothing wrong with making money and profits, but when it obscures all the real issues that need to be dealt with in order to BE a better company with better products and to BECOME more profitable, then that's a problem. Short term mentality is one way, though limited, to think about it. Related to this, the company has become more and more top down. I'm in a role some might consider low level executive management and I, along with others in my type of role have become increasingly marginalized as McGraw Hill and JDPA executives make decisions behind closed doors and hand them down. The president, Steve Goodall, makes a good effort to understand whats going on as does at least one divison head, but many others really aren't that interested in bottom or middle up information, though they pay lip service to it. They are also hampered by McGraw's corporate culture. I don't know how much Goodall can really do to improve things, but there is some room there. Increasingly, the McGraw Hill profit pressure has caused the company to focus much less on clients (ironic given we are supposedly a customer satisfaction company) and look to increase profitability by charging more and creating spin-off, me too products rather than really figuring out what clients and consumers need. The well known award and trophyhave created a real protectionist mentality of the brand which hampers doing cutting edge work or really meeting client needs. Related to this, again to a degree since the advent of McGraw Hill ownership, the shots are increasingly called by finance and legal with dramatically customer unfriendly policies that hamper the business units in growing their business.

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