GSMA reviews

4.1

81% would recommend to a friend

(346 total reviews)

Vivek Badrinath

Not enough data to show CEO approval

86% positive business outlook

GSMA has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 346 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The GSMA employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Telecommunications industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

346 reviews
1.0
Apr 29, 2020

Sinking Ship

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible work environment, international/global business, international travel and at one time the business was brimming with collaboration and teamwork.

Cons

GSMA is a fascinating example of complacency and empty leadership bringing a company to its knees. Numerous reviews on Glassdoor fault the DG for this failure but there is plenty of blame to spread around. Mats and his cabinet should be held accountable for the primary revenue generating portion of the business being run into the ground, but accountability is a foreign concept in GSMA’s culture. While GSMA promotes the idea of making the world a better place through mobile technology, their actions depict a mindset that lacks the slightest hint of focus. Personal agendas are in control and have evolved a previously collaborative and nurturing set of offices into a toxic work environment that is choking out all talent. There are no processes to follow at any level of the business. The loudest voices in the room dictate the course of a global business, without review or consequence. GSMA is an association first and foremost. The tricky caveat to this business is that the primary revenue generator is not membership to the association but the global events portfolio, led by MWC Barcelona. Association led events are historically unsuccessful for an extended period of time. GSMA hit a slow-to-manifest lottery with their Barcelona event and had a long runway to dig into what made it so special before falling victim to what drives most events to fail… poor planning and lack of value. Unfortunately, unchecked belief within the walls of GSMA that simply hosting an event with the GSMA name on it will guarantee success has prevented any thought or investigation into WHY the Barcelona event was successful. Over time, a company-wide hubris developed around their ability to host, manage and nurture events. If you don’t understand why your business succeeds, it’s going to be a real bear to comprehend the triggers that could lead to failure in the future. The reality is that an immense amount of luck slash being in the right place at the right time created a perfect and highly lucrative scenario in Barcelona. For a modern business professional witnessing the business planning process for events, the experience would be a mix of humor and brain-melting pain. Forecasting is a foreign concept. Revenue & attendance goals are generated on a whim by the CEO and GM. Numbers are plucked out of the air and strategy is led by gut instinct rather than evidence-based reasoning. Data that doesn’t align with the GM’s gut feeling is questioned ad infinitum or flatly dismissed. Budgets are routinely slashed in the middle of event cycles to meet margin targets. Goals that have direct correlation to these budgets are held to original targets and become impossible to meet. When those goals are not met, the response from senior leadership is to express disappointment and cite a lack of effort while refusing to address the overarching issues related to an invisible forecast, instability within budgeting exercises and pet projects eating up opportunities to deliver captivating and memorable events across the globe. The CEO has two faces. Public facing is a carefree guy who plays up the “I’m not the smartest guy in the room” act. But folly is the cloak of knavery and when it counts, his actions lack logic, double-cross his own teams and undermine the strategy of an entire business. Last fall a new CMO was brought on board. They’ve given themselves a 5 star rating on their April 8 Glassdoor post. At an individual level, this role at GSMA is a fascinating study in the damage that crushing personal insecurities can have on valuable character traits such as empathetic leadership, introspection and pragmatism. The CMO role is brimming with buzzwords and self-promotion but lacks substance and character. A startling contrast to the GSMA Values that are painted on office walls and referenced at every turn by the DG. GSMA is a global business with offices on 5 continents but is plagued by systemic HR issues. There is no process to recruitment which can be maddening. As a hiring manager, I was once excluded from the delivery and acceptance of an offer to a candidate. The compensation package, start-date and all associated negotiations were conducted by an internal recruiter without my knowledge or direction. More concerning is HR’s aversion to proactively dealing with workplace harassment. As an example, an individual in Atlanta had no fewer than 5 complaints raised against them in 2019 for harassment and badgering. This person was PROMOTED to a senior role in 2020. When employee surveys show poor morale and a lack of trust in leadership, the response from leadership is to point blame at the offices with the lowest scores. On a company-wide conference call in 2019, the DG stood in front of the London office and responded to a question about low company morale by saying, “if you don’t like how things are here, leave”. Amazing. Leaders create culture. Culture drives behavior. Behavior drives results. GSMA lacks C-suite leaders who comprehend the complexity of managing a global business. In a data-driven world, they’re light-years behind the businesses and organizations they claim to be assisting. As the lack of modern business acumen catches up with them, the house of cards will come crashing down.

avatar
GSMA Response
6y
Thank you for your review – we appreciate your honest feedback. We’re sorry to hear that you feel the company has changed and that the leadership team is not delivering. We have discussed your concerns with the Leadership Team. We’d love to take the opportunity to explain to you in greater detail the positive steps that we’re taking as an organisation and to understand in more detail your views. Please contact us on hrbp@gsma.com.
1.0
May 2, 2020

Toxic and notoriously political

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There were definite pros in days gone by when it comes to benefits, but all that has changed. Technology and m4d divisions have some talented and well meaning professionals.

Cons

Someone reading reviews might think GSMAs messy financial situation and layoffs are the reason for unhappy reviews. But the truth is the company has been deeply flawed for months, years, before COVID. A toxic, corrupt environment. HR is political, self serving and dead set on covering up bad cases of discrimination and bullying, even sexual harassment. The worst HR division I’ve seen in a long career. There was stacks of evidence of bad antics from marketing leadership before the company finally decided to act last year so it didn’t go public. GSMA has many long serving middle managers who are lazy, propped up by allies in the leadership team, with no drive for innovation or hard work. Some people have stuck around for the benefits like the bonus, business class flights and easy excuses for travel, which have been stripped away now with no signs of return. GSMA won’t survive much longer with a leadership team busier defending 6-7 figure salaries than putting the welfare of their staff first or trying to balance the event-heavy revenue model. Many of us are working hard to find a new opportunity.

avatar
GSMA Response
6y
Thank you for your review. We take all concerns raised with us seriously and deal with them appropriately. We’re concerned about your comments and would like to address these as soon as possible. If you are willing to discuss in further detail, please contact us on hrbp@gsma.com.
1.0
Jun 1, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The events are very cool experiences, the travel opportunities were wonderful (although now no longer exist), and met some amazing people.

Cons

Poor, disorganized and disinterested leadership from the top down. The actual doers are not included in any strategy meetings or considered in any long term planning. You have no voice unless you’re a department head. No matter how much good work you do, how much initiative you take, or how talented you are. The company has no means of employee recognition, and promotions or expansions of responsibility are a pipe dream. Good luck to you if you don’t work in the London office, as you’ll be marginalized and it’ll be automatically assumed that you are lazy and incompetent. Despite the fact that all of the events were put together by teams outside of London. Regardless, the entire marketing department has been restructured to be centralized out of London, eliminating dozens of loyal and talented people elsewhere as they hit the reset button under a new leader and her hand-picked inner circle (now all based there). — marketing leadership used to be US based —- Those teams that actually put together the mobile industry’s largest events? They no longer exist. If you’re an event planning professional, best look elsewhere. This used to be a fun place to work, with great colleagues and benefits, exciting travel opportunities, and excellent work/life balance, but the past 18 months have seen all of that disappear under disorganized and paranoid leadership, massive turnover, budget cuts, restrictions of work from home days, and, once the pandemic hit, huge financial losses as they realized the entire company is funded by a single event (which was cancelled this year). I see no reason to believe this company will exist in its current form in a year’s time, and can not recommend anyone consider working here in any department - especially not marketing or event operations. Those departments, unfortunately, are now dead. Look to its member companies and other tech firms if you’re wanting to break into the industry. There’s no future here.

avatar
GSMA Response
6y
Thank you for your review of the GSMA. We’re obviously concerned about your experience of a negative working environment and that you feel the leadership has not been ideal. We have raised these concerns with the Leadership Team - if you’re willing to discuss in further detail, please contact us on hrbp@gsma.com
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Glassdoor has 449 GSMA reviews submitted anonymously by GSMA employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if GSMA is right for you.