Excellent employer, innovative company, and impactful leadership that invest in their people. - Senior Program Manager, Technology Audible Employee Review

5.0
4 Apr 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Audible is an amazing product to be able to work on and even better employer to work for. Everyone is valued, is imaginative, and works with the customer at the center of everything they do. The company culture and founding principles are inspired by all of its employees. As an Amazon subsidiary, Audible drives innovation with best-in-class technology, is always raising the bar with its people and product, and is an inclusive environment that I love coming to work at every day. Audible is invested in each employee's career growth and career expansion opportunities as well.

Cons

No major downsides to highlight. Overall a positive experience, competitive compensation, and work-life balance.

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Audible Response
3y
We appreciate you sharing your feedback with us! It’s important to us that Audible has a welcoming atmosphere for our employees and it’s great to hear that you feel it. We wouldn’t be able to have a positive culture without people like you. Thank you for helping make Audible a great place to work.

Explore other reviews about Audible

5.0
10 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Audible is an Amazon company. I think as a whole, this company attracts people who are kind and fun spirited. Good product.

Cons

Disorganisation. Commute can be hard.

2.0
30 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pay, health insurance, free lunch, gym reimbursement, course reimbursement

Cons

Audible is no longer the company it used to be. It once had a culture that valued independence, flexibility, collaboration, and genuine passion for the work. Over the past few years, it has increasingly adopted Amazon's culture, and unfortunately many of the qualities that made Audible special have disappeared. * Politics have become increasingly important. Employees who excel at presenting and self-promotion often appear to be rewarded more than those who consistently deliver meaningful results. Cross-team collaboration has also become much weaker. * The pressure from senior leadership is relentless. Expectations continue to rise while resources do not. The workload has become overwhelming, leaving many employees stressed, anxious, and burned out. I've seen colleagues take medical leave or leave the company altogether because the environment became unsustainable. * Promotions are extremely difficult to obtain, creating unnecessary internal competition instead of encouraging teamwork. * The mandatory five-day return-to-office policy ("return or resign") significantly hurts work-life balance and feels disconnected from how knowledge work can be performed effectively. * Documentation has become excessive. Employees spend enormous amounts of time writing documents and preparing presentations simply to satisfy Amazon's internal processes rather than creating meaningful business impact. * The workload is so heavy that it's difficult to maintain high-quality work. People are constantly rushing from one deliverable to another, leaving little time for thoughtful analysis or innovation. * Senior leadership often appears unwilling to challenge top-down decisions. Teams are expected to generate endless documents, metrics, and presentations, but much of this work feels performative rather than valuable. * Many managers provide little coaching or support. Instead of empowering employees to own their work, management often focuses on criticism, micromanagement, and rigid processes. Some managers seem to lack the leadership and people-management skills necessary to build effective teams. * Employees are incredibly busy, yet much of that effort doesn't translate into meaningful or lasting impact. It often feels like working endlessly just to keep internal processes moving. * Removing President's Day as a company holiday was disappointing and negatively affected employee morale. * Company-wide All Hands meetings often feel overly scripted and focused on promoting corporate messaging rather than addressing employees' real concerns. The repeated messaging about how "awesome" everything is can feel disconnected from employees' day-to-day experiences. * Frequent reorganizations create constant disruption. Teams are repeatedly reshuffled, priorities change overnight, and it becomes difficult to build momentum or execute long-term strategies. Overall, the culture has shifted from one built on trust, autonomy, and collaboration to one driven by process, bureaucracy, and constant pressure. For many long-time employees, it's simply not the same company anymore.

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