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Anheuser-Busch InBev

Engaged Employer

Anheuser-Busch InBev reviews

3.6

66% would recommend to a friend

(4,550 total reviews)
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Michel Doukeris

75% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

Anheuser-Busch InBev has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 4,550 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Anheuser-Busch InBev employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
2.0
Oct 26, 2017

"Soulless" reputation is well-deserved. Toxic culture.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Early in your career, pay and responsibility above what is normal Big budgets Iconic brands

Cons

- Absence of moral values/soullessness. Working at ABI is kind of like selling your soul to the devil. ABI does not value people, except as a means to making money. This is a company whose behavior is regulated only by perceived self-interest. The only values leadership consistently and explicitly encourages employees to embody are ambition and competitiveness. ABI's poor treatment of people is infamous in the industry, but employees, suppliers, agencies, and distributors begrudgingly deal with ABI because of its deep pockets. To offer one example that typifies ABI's callousness when it sniffs that it can save itself a cent or a bit of trouble: one new hire relocated to another state for ABI only to be told on her second week that her new office was being closed and that she wasn't being offered another position. The company will not hesitate to pretend to be more compassionate than it really is when it thinks this might be profitable (for instance, Bud Light ever-so-briefly supporting transgender rights in an attempt to attract young liberals), but do not be fooled; ABI's ownership and management is obsessed with money and power. That's it. - Misogynistic frat culture. While interviewing with another company, an interviewer said that he had heard that Silicon Valley had nothing on ABI when it came to having a misogynistic bro culture. I haven't experienced Silicon Valley so I can't speak to that comparison, but I can confirm that it's pronounced at ABI. Senior executives talk about female employees' bodies in Portugese in the office (this has been overheard by an employee they didn't know spoke Portugese). A senior executive I had just met groped a employee of his in front of me and encouraged me to comment on her body in front of her without any apparent concern that I might find it inappropriate. Senior executives set an example of excessive drinking and public boorishness. - Cultishness. Zealous devotion to the company is expected. My onboarding included prompted chanting of the CEO Brito's name when he made an appearance, rewriting the lyrics to a well-known pop song to make it an ABI "anthem" that we had to perform, and HR employees physically blocking new employees from using the restroom (!) during long presentations by senior executives (who we should have been more "grateful" made time in their schedules for us). The new German employees in my onboarding were disturbed by how fascist the experience felt. - The Feel Good Department. Brito said in a speech to Stanford GSB that when he acquired a company, he would always kill the metaphorical "feel good department" that worked to create false optimism by sweeping problems under the rug. Unfortunately that department is alive and well at the ABI of today. People who raise issues are labeled "culturally misaligned" and passed over for promotions or shown the door. Yes-men who misleadingly filter information and depict a scrubbed version of reality to their superiors get promoted while the problems mount. - Negativity. Given the power of the Feel Good Department, most employees resort to griping behind closed doors about how unhappy they are at ABI and how they'd like to get out. People are constantly leaving. There is a steady stream of goodbye happy hours. It's a toxic and depressing environment. - Deceptive, manipulative, non-communicative HR. HR lured candidates to fill the new Corporate Strategy Office in NYC in 2015 by lying about how often bonuses have been paid out in the US (only twice since 2008, and at low payout rates). This led, as you might imagine, to a flurry of quick exits by disappointed hires. External hires I knew reported that ABI HR is the coldest, least supportive, and most manipulative HR department they've encountered in their careers. After being offered a new role, I was asked to sign a relocation benefits payback contract before the liability was calculated. I expressed my desire to have the amount I would be liable to pay back calculated prior to my signing the agreement. In response, a member of HR who I'd never met before told me over email that I could leave the company if I didn't want to accept the agreement. "Our way or the highway" is ABI's policy. ABI HR favors faits accompli: employees are informed after the fact of major decisions about their careers. - Chaos. Constantly shifting strategy. Meetings routinely starting hours late. Chronic shortage of conference rooms in a custom-built, brand new CSO. Endless fire drills about things that don't matter. Lack of process discipline. Always reinventing the wheel. Inconsistent, conclusion-driven analysis. That this exists at a company of this size is remarkable. - Incompetence. The cause of the chaos. Aside from cutting costs, ABI is surprisingly bad at conducting business. Few managers seem to know what they're doing, which is the result of 1) a propaganda-heavy, practical info-light onboarding process that does not prepare new hires for their roles 2) a bizarre HR strategy of putting people in charge of things for which they have no cultural or functional experience. The stated, faulty premise is, "a smart, "culturally-aligned" employee can do any job anywhere in our company" 3) High turnover and HR frequently moving people between positions means company experience and institutional memory is very low on most teams - Bureaucracy. An abundance of useless, box-checking processes made all the more frustrating by the chaos and incompetence cited above that good processes could ameliorate. Endless, arduous templates mandated by Global that disrupt Zone work, so Zone placates Global with junk data and moves on to real work. Sales and marketing duplicating the same time-intensive performance analyses month after month in silos. - Painfully bad technology. If you're wistful for the tech of the 90's, ABI is the place for you. Countless hours are squandered by poorly designed systems. Very frustrating. ABI tech does not enable cost center owners to prevent unauthorized charges against their centers and these charges appear in cost reports without a requisitioner identified, resulting in more hours spent playing Sherlock Holmes than I care to remember. - Nonexistent or small bonuses. ABI sets "stretch" targets that North America never hits. Don't expect to receive a bonus payout of more than 10-15% here, and usually it's 0%. In the end, I realized that most of my learning at ABI was negative: I was learning what not to do by the many mistakes happening every day at all levels of the organization. I decided to move to a competent company were I could begin engaging in positive learning. I couldn't be happier with the change.

2.0
Jul 7, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Decent pay (if and only if bonus pays out - which doesn't happen often) - Ambitious people - Some free beer - International mobility opportunities (but not for everyone) - Open to moving people crossfunctionally

Cons

- Moves people around roles and functions so frequently that there is no historical knowledge on teams and people are trying to figure out just how to do the basics of their job. Does not value specialists. - Does NOT care about people. Treats people like any other piece of machinery. You are expected to sell your soul to this company. Those who are promoted are in the office early and stay late - regardless of how efficient they're actually working. You will work and travel on weekends, take meetings outside typical working hours (and be expected to be in the office). DO NOT believe anyone who tells you it is not about facetime, just results. They are lying. Unless you are a workaholic, expect to give everything to this company and either burnout or be pushed out. - Results oriented, except constantly cuts resources needed to help employees to achieve their results. Expect already lean teams to become leaner and to have very small budgets for a large company. - Generally toxic, negative work environment. Cutthroat and surprisingly unfriendly for a beer company. You cannot trust anyone. You are all competing to move up or out, so no one really is there to make friends. People are extremely defensive and quick to point out each others failures, which quickly takes a toll on relationships. - Up or out culture based on results + who "knows" you and likes you, so if you are not South American or a White male, much harder to move up and make connections (regardless of your results). Very fratty, macho work environment and leadership styles. Very few leaders who are women, LGBTQ, African Americans, and Asians, and given the culture of the company, and its deep problems, don't expect this to change. - Not a family friendly company. Men rarely take leave and women who do take maternity leave text and email their teams throughout it. Not flexible to family needs or family emergencies. You need to be okay being contacted 24/7/365. Everything is treated as urgent, even when it is not. - Too many more to list.

2.0
Jun 20, 2018

Toxic, Mysognyist Culture

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay is competitive and great when you're in your 20's.

Cons

Everything else. Sexism. Racism. This is a #metoo ticking timebomb. Pro-Trump bs. Your mental health will suffer. You will start to question why you went to a good university (when most of your managers have associates degrees or went to Kentucky/West Virginia/some off brand state school and can barely write a coherent sentence). This company has a TOXIC culture. I didn't realize the extent of the toxicity until I left and worked elsewhere. As a woman in the field, I was called every name in the book, laughed out of rooms, and consistently doubted and belittled for being a woman (at the formative age of 23...) AB's culture is reductive -- both management and independent distributors view women as promotional models incapable of leading or making high-level decisions. I was managed by uneducated men who had no perspective on motivating or developing people. It was degrading. If you have a choice, don't put yourself through this bs. You deserve better.

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