Nasdaq reviews

3.9

77% would recommend to a friend

(1,403 total reviews)
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Adena Friedman

89% approve of CEO

70% positive business outlook

Nasdaq has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 1,403 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Nasdaq employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Financial Services industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

1K reviews
1.0
Feb 21, 2013

Does it get any worse?

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

My colleagues were great to work with.

Cons

Unfortunately NASDAQ was the worst company I have ever worked for. It starts at the top and ends with the local sales management (specifically in Chicago). They say you're only as strong as your weakest link and it's quite imperative that the sales managers are destroying what could be a great place to work for.

2.0
Feb 13, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Opportunities to contribute to interesting projects. Peers, teams & coworkers that range from average to excellent in skill & personality. Compensation - Consists of a base salary with a 5,10,15,20,40% yearly bonus depending on one's position (e.g. associate, professional, senior, director, vp, etc) - ESPP is available in 6 month intervals at a 15% discount - Healthcare kicks in immediately rather than after some period (90 day) - RSUs are granted yearly and vest after 4 years. - 4% 401k match w/ Vanguard

Cons

As with any large organization, it suffers similar challenges. - Plenty of turnover and organizational restructuring. Each year titles are renamed, groups are volleyed back and forth between senior managers in the name of "growth" "efficiency" "synergy" This leads to an unfortunate loss of direction each time a reorganization/management shift occurs in the technology organization. Despite these shifts, the groups and the organizational process/workflow/structure have remained relatively unchanged. The same groups talk to each other to get the same work accomplished. Rather than the Greens talking to the Yellows, it simply shifts to the Oranges talking to the Browns in title only. It is very similar to the observation that mergers fail due to organizational processes not meshing together. - A technology company severely incapacitated by the recent corporate culture of defendable decisions since the technology issues of the largest IPO. e.g. "No one ever got fired for hiring IBM." This has mainly led to the culture comprised of skilled, agile teams, capable of building solutions, to incapable teams that have lost their top talent to turnover. The policies put forth make for a severely demoralizing & demotivating a workforce that's otherwise tremendously capable. This makes for a fairly oppressive work environment and a structure that engenders mistrust. A small bit of sanity comes from the small alliances that are forged amongst the Romeos & Juliets of groups at odds with each other. - Senior management is severely disconnected from the ground floor workers as they are incapable of dog-fooding the products & policies they put forth. As many know, an idea does not sell itself, but the hard work and attention to detail make the difference. By pushing policies in the name of leaving a legacy, resume bullet point, or being a yes-man, relationships & respect are broken. - ADHD inducing distractions. Being an open setup, there's a tremendous lack of ability to focus on a task at hand.

5.0
Jan 30, 2013

Great company to work for.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Ability to make a lot of money.

Cons

Lots of turnover in the employee base as well as constant change.

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