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World Economic Forum

Is this your company?

Lackluster management. Get in, stay for a few years and get out. - Senior Associate World Economic Forum Employee Review

3.0
15 Jul 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Just as the Forum serves as a platform for its constituents, the Forum serves as a platform for its employees. The network you gain at the Forum is unparalleled. As a hub and connector, the Forum can enable you to meet the right people - both constituents and colleagues - to take you to the next step . If you approach the Forum with a cogent strategy and the right attitude (drinking a little bit of the Swiss Kool Aid helps), you can find advance your career in a wonderful way. Your colleagues will be some of the best and brightest with the warmest hearts. Just like any organization, there will be sour apples who are jaded, cynical, or entitled. There will be a few that make you think, "How on earth did you get here? Who hired you?" But the core of the organization exhibits a wonderful culture of curiosity, nerdiness and helpfulness. The folks, for the most part, are humble and authentic. Jive with the culture and you'll be rewarded. The social cachet that comes with working at the Forum is fun. For those in the know, they light up when you say where you work and start asking you about people you've met and places you've been. For those not in the know, they assume you're a spy, an economist and/or an elitist. On the whole, compensation is good. I came from the rag-tag non-profit sector so everything seemed great! I can't say how my ex-private sector colleagues may feel.

Cons

For the first year on the job, you will repeated try to answer, "What we do?" For subsequent years, you will find a way to BS an answer that may or may not seem intelligible to a layperson. Our founder (who is still running the show for 40+ years) describes the Forum as adaptive to the needs of the global system. Others might say we're schizophrenic. Another review says management has a "weather-vane approach to strategy." I'm in incredible agreement with this statement. A shiny new trend/topic emerges and captures the attention of senior managers. Resources are diverted. Results are mixed. Like the obstinate Swiss alps visible from the windows of HQ in Geneva, the organization has resisted some innovative change. Process are burdensome, sacred and often times confusing. The main explanation being: This is how it's always been done. Some processes are set in stone: event logistics being the most notorious - do not try to mess with them. Yet some are curiously completely non-existent: business development, account management, project management. Knowledge is kept in the minds of employees and transferred verbally or through formal or informal meetings, not on any robust internal platform. We may tout the vast array of changes, new ideas, innovations, but at the heart of what the Forum does is staging Davos and similar events. Davos is where the working calendars start and ends. Most projects, constituent strategies, internal incentives are planned around Davos. The Forum is heavily an events organization. Decentralized management structure and a founder-first, top-down culture creates fiefdoms (a common word you will read on Glassdoor). Your time at the Forum will be heavily impacted by who your manager and your colleagues are. Some teams have stellar reputations with happy, engaged employees. Some teams are a recurring management quagmire with high turnover and distrust. Yet the Forum keeps these poor managers employed. Some have internal reputations as untouchable because they were hired by the founder. Top brass (the managing board) is heavily comprised of white men from Europe or North America. Why is it so difficult to hire and retain a female senior executive? Why is it so difficult to hire and retain a senior leader from the developing world? Career development is self-initiated. Talent development is not a core investment. Trainings are sparse and barebones. HR is mostly used for talent acquisition and benefits management. Don't expect career support from them.

Explore other reviews about World Economic Forum

5.0
9 Aug 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

This organization is constantly evolving but I think generally in the right direction. Great place for those who strive in unstructured environments.

Cons

Hours can be long and you have to enjoy travel.

3.0
5 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great exposure to ideas, good broad experience that can be applied to other jobs

Cons

Lots of infighting at the top, leaks down to lower levels. The Forum makes poor hiring decisions and teams suffer.

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