No growth plans for employees, no training plans, performance appraisals are biased, no strategy alignment in teams - Anonymous employee easyJet Employee Review

2.0
Oct 17, 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

In the beginning easyJet would seem to be a really nice place to work. Most people are friendly and approachable.

Cons

Even if you want to do the right thing leadership would not support if you do not know them personally. Company culture is based only on knowing people , so if you are new or from a different cultural background forget about getting anything from the company even if you are a deserving employee. CX level is fine but middle management leadership teams would help only if they know you. Vendor employees are treated very badly. Many old permanent employees although non performing still get whatever they want only as they have been in the company for long and have links to the leadership team.

avatar
easyJet Response
6y
Hi, thank you for taking the time to leave your review. Feedback is always good, whether it is positive or constructive so we will definitely take this onboard. Please do always feel free to speak to your HR business partner regarding your concerns. Thanks again

Explore other reviews about easyJet

5.0
Feb 16, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Fantastic at things and stuff

Cons

It was great stuff to

1.0
Nov 25, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Competitive pay and benefits for Malta aviation industry. -Skilled colleagues and opportunities for technical learning.

Cons

-Serious reports of bullying, harassment, and neglect of staff mental health were escalated to top management, but rarely result in action. -The SUSO (Speak Up Speak Out) system does not work as advertised; staff complaints raised through SUSO are ignored or lead to retaliation, not resolution. -EasyJet’s “zero tolerance” policy on discrimination, bullying, and harassment is not upheld—investigations are slow, lack follow-through, and rarely result in change. -Evidence of disability discrimination at the highest levels has been presented; these concerns are dismissed or left unaddressed by senior management. -Employees who report problems or ask for reasonable adjustments face career setbacks and poor treatment. -Overall, morale is very low among those affected by discrimination or who have used internal reporting channels.

2
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All