Challenging Environment - Anonymous employee Expedia Group Employee Review

2.0
Nov 18, 2009
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Savvy technical staff, strong product, and some incredible people.

Cons

Issues with upper management not readjusting project timelines with the business and/or CEO/CFO/CTO when the requested work is unobtainable in the timeline specified. Lots of political games that distract the staff and promote incompetency. Needs to be more focus on establishing a few key objectives and seeing them through to completion. Always 20+ priority #1s which leads to the staff never accomplishing anything they start. Company demands too much from its staff, providing no work/life balance. They ask staff to cancel vacations, work weekends, and holidays to make up for the overall lack of planning. The primary reason the company is successful is that it has several incredible individuals that carry the rest and kill themselves in the process.

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5.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

work life balance lots of pto

Cons

limited room for growth in the company

2.0
Jun 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay, supportive manager, and genuinely pleasant colleagues.

Cons

Frequent reorgs and shifting strategic direction made it difficult to build momentum or plan long‑term. Over time, contractor roles became increasingly narrow and production‑focused, which limited opportunities for meaningful skill development. Responsibilities that originally included project management were reduced to primarily email production work. There’s also a broader corporate pattern where work is expected to be completed exactly as written, with little room for judgment or improvement. Even small, quick optimizations can lead to pushback rather than appreciation, creating an environment where going “above and beyond” requires multiple layers of approval — which defeats the purpose of being proactive in the first place. Finally, there’s an in‑office expectation (less strict than for full‑time employees, but still present) for work that can be done entirely remotely. This tends to benefit highly social personalities, but for those who prefer focused, independent work, it feels unnecessary. Social dynamics also play a noticeable role; if you’re not immediately well‑liked or you make a single early mistake, it can create a self‑fulfilling perception that’s difficult to overcome.

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