A stable place with great work/life balance but rife with incompetent middle managers and politics - Vice President Visa Inc. Employee Review

3.0
6 Apr 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pay, benefits, opportunity for international travel and/or interaction with other cultures, opportunity to live in San Francisco and reverse commute, opportunity to work for one of the great business stories of the 20th and 21st centuries.

Cons

Association culture (pre-IPO) is still alive in some pockets. Visa was a place for mediocre people to go and have a comfy 20 year run with minimal effort due to the duopoly with MasterCard. Some association dinosaurs still roam the halls. The association culture bred a level of pettiness and politics I have never seen in any other organization. Meetings after meetings after meetings. You're only one re-org away from working for a horrible person. Payments industry is dull, dull, dull to begin with, but when you layer on aging, mediocre bankers and ex government (Fed) executives who land at Visa to put a cherry on top of their mediocre careers, it becomes not just dull but soul-destroying.

Explore other reviews about Visa Inc.

5.0
23 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Agile for its size and age

Cons

Difficult industry to navigate. New competition.

2.0
25 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Excellent work-life balance, strong 401(k) match, and generally good benefits. There are smart, hardworking people across the company from all walks of life, and the Visa name still carries weight on a resume.

Cons

The work-life balance comes with a tradeoff: innovation moves at a glacial pace. In my experience, Visa was a highly political organization where visibility and relationships often mattered more than performance. Career growth felt slow, especially for high-performing mid-career employees looking to expand their scope or take ownership. There was constant organizational churn. In two years, I had three managers and made it through multiple reorgs, but our entire team lived in constant fear of ongoing layoffs. Layoffs and restructuring felt far more common than leadership acknowledged, which created a disconnect between company messaging and employee reality. The lack of trust for executive leadership is readily apparent across all internal channels. My org was not particularly valued, compensation lagged the market, and the return-to-office rollout was/continues to be handled poorly and rigidly. If you're looking for stability, predictable work, and reasonable hours, Visa can be a good fit. If you're a high performer looking for speed, creativity, ownership, and growth, there are better places to spend your time (and your paycheck will probably be higher).

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