Reviews by job title

21 reviews
3.0
19 Jun 2022

Okay work experience

Recommend
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Business outlook

Pros

Good medical and dental benefits. Opportunity to learn. Some colleagues are nice and helpful.

Cons

Some people are not nice and helpful. The work can be stressful as the support and resources are scarce. Tensions in some teams.

1.0
14 Apr 2023

politics everywhere

Recommend
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Pros

great city, very international staff

Cons

Nonprofit organisation is a real challenge. The place is full of office politics + everyone speaks about everyone, and this is encouraged by the management, which seems to show benevolence but does not apply. Great colleagues have been gracefully and expensively fired because someone (or 2 people) with authority wanted them gone. Faculty who lead the school should apply more what they do teach (leading by example..)

1.0
14 Aug 2025

Used to be great but now sinking faster than Manchester United

Anonymous employee
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Pros

Best medical benefits ever seen Lunch subsidy is good Most colleagues are nice The folks from campus operations, gym, social committee (basically James Middleditch's team or people under his purview) are amazingly dedicated people

Cons

Where to even start... there is no meritocracy to speak of. If you are a French speaker or your manager likes you, limited rules apply to you. Diversity is dropping in some campuses like Singapore but that's not the school's fault, it is government policy. HR has zero relevant experience in real world settings - Ever since they introduced a shocking poorly executed compa-ratio policy when discussing remuneration in 2024, most long serving staff that have stuck with the school through COVID and all the difficult times get ZERO increment due to salaries being forced into a band, leading staff retention to drop to an all-time low. If you are a new joiner and negotiate a good package to join, bear in mind the compa-ratio policy means you will not get a pay raise for at least 3-5 years or until you quit. All the good people from the past 10 years have quit or are in the process of finding a new job. INSEAD's work culture has gone down the toilet bowl since Francisco Veloso took over from Ilian Mihov. People who get promoted now are not the performing ones, but rather the ones who are good at carrying balls. If you want to keep your job, make sure you do not whistleblow on any wrongdoing even if it happens in front of you, especially if it is done by top management. We had a popular ex-colleague (brit guy) in talent acquisition who can attest to this. There are also some departments in degree programmes who are haemorrhaging long-serving staff faster than ice cream melts in Singapore due to the wonderful "leadership" on display. Current INSEAD leadership probably got confused and think that they are working at INEOS and not INSEAD, as they are sinking the school's work culture faster than Jim Ratcliffe is destroying Manchester United.

4.0
19 Oct 2025

Excellent Workplace

Recommend
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Pros

The people are great, as are the students.

Cons

The leadership team is not effective or thoughtful

3.0
13 Jun 2025
Recommend
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Business outlook

Pros

Health insurance is amazing, people are generally nice

Cons

Culture is terrible, leadership more interested in office politics and backstabbing each other. Small initiatives take a long time to implement, big initiatives never get there.

5.0
17 Jul 2025

Great Place to Work

Recommend
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Business outlook

Pros

Love the multi-cultural nature of the organisation where people from all walks of life come together to create opportunities for growth, not just to prospects but within the organisation. The health benefits are simply amazing, unlike any other and it has helped the family tremendously. The work life balance is what sets INSEAD apart from other organisations.

Cons

We need more qualified leaders who can make decisions and take responsibilities. We need to create more opportunities for those colleagues who have the knowledge and skills, to be qualified leaders but never got the chance.

3.0
9 Oct 2023

Diversity

Recommend
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Pros

There is a true sense of diversity.

Cons

Promotions are scarce and often promoting people without adequate training.

4.0
21 Mar 2025
Recommend
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Pros

Diversity is great. People in general are very friendly. I made lots of good friends there.

Cons

It's not a meritocratic place. And the way the school is organized is quite complex, making work sometimes very political.

1.0
12 Jul 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Despite the 1-star review, there are however several good benefits at INSEAD. - Excellent medical insurance coverage - Work/life balance (especially if you are based in France which takes work/life balance to the extreme) - Mostly friendly colleagues - Very nice work environment with coffee shop, gym and fun events - Holiday allowance and WFH policy - If you're based in France you can basically go on sick leave, sabbatical leave, burnout leave, whatever, for as long as you like with no consequences

Cons

Unfortunately the structure of INSEAD leads to certain institutional problems that at this stage have become detrimental to the operations of the school. Top leadership in the school is drawn upon from Faculty who generally have little real-world experience and actual people or business skills. This applies also to the Dean. Another institutional problem is that every 5 or 10 years there is a change of Dean and during that transitional period there is a vacuum of power at the top. 2023 is such a transition year and the current Dean mentally checked out of making any difficult decisions at least 18 months ago. A new Dean is incoming but by the time he is settled in it will mean that INSEAD has had about 2 years with an indifferent leader who was just focused on his exit. Sadly, this lack of leadership has filtered down to the next level and allowed all kinds of toxicity to develop. Upper-management engage in a Game of Thrones style battle between themselves as they vie to position themselves for the next Dean, dragging their departments with them into their political battles. Most toxic of all is the HR department that has been allowed to grow like a cancer within the school, negatively influencing everything it touches. Read the Glassdoor reviews (select for both English and French) and you'll see that most complaints are towards HR - ignore the repetitive 5-star reviews which bear all the hallmarks (short incomplete sentences, bad spelling, lazy copying/pasting) of being written by the guy who leads HR. There are serious questions about the leadership of HR that need to be addressed. Turnover is huge and it's leadership team is inexperienced and unrespected with a tenure measured in months rather than years. Serious ethical issues surround the guy leading HR and his herd. Harassment complaints are swept away, retaliation is guaranteed despite reassurances, there are questionable expensive training schemes signed off that have personal links to HR leadership, ditto for recruitment, and the narcissistic yet incompetent Chief People Officer regularly loses his temper in group meetings without consequence. An organization should not suffer because one person has unresolved mummy issues. During my time at INSEAD I witnessed shocking abuses of power and the subsequent cover ups. Blame for this can only be pointed towards the Dean whose indifference has allowed toxic monsters in upper management to reign unchecked. For a school that preaches itself as being a "force for good" I saw people fired for the crime of being harassed, HR staff given salaries and pay increases that went outside normal process and were denied to other departments (even when Singapore staff were forced to take an 8% paycut during COVID), and seriously questionable decisions on how money was spent. I left INSEAD entirely cynical of non-profits and related NGOs and would recommend to anyone with an appreciation of competence to seek employment elsewhere.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 21 Reviews

Glassdoor has 419 INSEAD reviews submitted anonymously by INSEAD employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if INSEAD is right for you.