Ain't what it used to be - Developer Nielsen Employee Review

2.0
3 May 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People here are nice, and the work-life balance is great--unlimited PTO, reasonable hours, and an implicit expectation that you'll figure out how to get your job done. I've been here for 8 years and have had a variety of roles; it's been really easy to move around and try other things.

Cons

I've been at Nielsen for almost 8 years, and it was a really special place for a long time. I used to heartily recommend Nielsen to others and was proud to work there, but we've fumbled and I don't think there's a way back. The first problem is that Nielsen is a monopoly, and, with the exception of a few handful of companies like Microsoft, monopolistic companies eventually fall victim to their own success by way of short-sighted hubris. Breaking this down: 1. We failed to predict and react to streaming. While it was obvious to outsiders that streaming was going to overtake linear television, our TV clients actively indulged in a fantasy that streaming wasn't anything to worry about ... and instead of predicting industry trends like the "independent market leader" we claim to be, we drank the Kool-Aid with them and did nothing to develop technology to track streaming. Then streaming exploded and we had no ability to track streaming at all. We are trying to catch up, but it is too little, too late. 2. The quality of our products isn't great. Our products are a UI/UX nightmare, and require extensive training to use... not because our data is inherently complex, but because we design obfuscated systems. If you pull TV ratings from three products for the same program, it's likely they won't even match. We got trashed in the press for our data quality issues during the pandemic... clients were mad, and they had every right to be. 3. We've made a lot of improvements in our tech, but it's still lacking. Nielsen is built on tribal knowledge; learning the (very complex) calculation for a TV rating is hard, isn't documented anywhere, and every team has their own way of calculating it that doesn't match what you get from our client-facing product NPOWER. Prior to David Kenny coming in, we underinvested in tech and offshored the development of core products. While this has gotten better, the tech debt is enormous and hinders us from moving fast. 4. Our product org is underwhelming. We completely missed the mark on reacting to the rise of Netflix. Big miss. Additionally, we have many product managers on highly technical products who just simply don't get technology or data. You don't need to code to be a product manager, but you DO need to understand tech--e.g., what does it mean to have truly Big Data and how do you design a product that scales? Very few of our big tech products seem to have technical product managers. Google has technical product managers for a reason--for some reason, we don't. Culturally: 1. While not all of Nielsen is like this, there are many departments that are stuck in their ways and resistant to doing things better or more efficiently. Nielsen doesn't exactly have an eye for process improvement. "We've always done it this way" is a common refrain. 2. Nielsen went all-in on remote work once the pandemic hit. While they've reopened their offices, there has been minimal effort to cultivate a welcoming in-office experience. Being open to remote work and creating a welcoming office experience aren't mutually exclusive, but Nielsen treats it that way.

Explore other reviews about Nielsen

5.0
14 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Was a great job with great benefits

Cons

No cons at all honestly

1.0
16 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Absolutley nothing. Which is a tragedy, because Nielsen was once an absolutely great place to work. I wanted to retire here. The culture used to be great, and I really loved being a part of this place. I loved my team, my management, and the people. Then along came the current CEO who is the classic example of a person who knows the cost of everything, but the value of nothing. He took over and ran the company full speed ahead in to the iceberg. And to try and save the sinking ship, he laid off literally thousands of highly experienced, highly trained, and highly engaged people to replace them with fresh overseas hires who know nothing about the company and expect them to be trained from the ground up to replace literally centuries of collective expererience and client relations. It's a disaster. This CEO shouldn't be trusted to run a lemonade stand.

Cons

Everything. Pay, job security, culture, management. Nothing is good here anymore. Don't take a job here unless you are truly desperate. And even then, it should only be as a stop-gap until you can find something else.

5
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