Not a merger—a hostile takeover that failed the staff - Project Manager VodafoneThree Employee Review

1.0
27 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The People, from the Three brand perspective, Three UK was a great place to work and nurtured some of the best peoplei have ever worked with

Cons

What was advertised as a merger between Vodafone and Three has felt like a incredibly hostile takeover. The integration process has systematically erased Three’s culture and legacy, alongside a massive reduction in headcount. The consultation process felt ruthless and lacked transparency, seemingly designed to obscure the true scale of redundancies while making internal mobility nearly impossible for at-risk staff. HR/People teams are visibly overwhelmed by the volume of grievances and messy transitions. Total reward packages have been severely downgraded. Legacy Three staff were re-graded into lower bands, denied annual pay increases, and stripped of basic perks like medical insurance. Furthermore, shifting the majority of new roles exclusively to Stoke feels like a deliberate strategy for "natural attrition," disproportionately impacting operations and staff in Scotland. The culture is rigid, old-school, and hyper-focused on corporate micromanagement. Line managers are forced to prioritize endless trackers and strict office attendance over actual productivity. There is a massive disconnect between the company's stated values and its actual behavior toward its people.

Explore other reviews about VodafoneThree

1.0
27 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible working arrangements in some teams. Some genuinely supportive individuals. Benefits package is relatively strong compared to parts of the market.

Cons

The Vodafone/Three merger has, in my experience, highlighted longstanding cultural and structural issues rather than solved them. Progression opportunities can feel limited, with development conversations often not translating into tangible outcomes year after year. There is a significant disconnect between what is said around inclusion, fairness and career development versus what some employees experience in reality. There is a strong emphasis on DEI and “bringing your whole self to work”, however at times this can feel performative rather than genuinely embedded in decision-making and career progression. Concerns around bias, favouritism and inconsistent treatment can leave employees questioning whether opportunities are truly equitable. The culture can also feel overly political. At times, colleagues may appear supportive on the surface, but trust can be difficult to build, and employees may feel cautious about speaking openly for fear that comments could later be used against them. Pay is below market for a number of roles, particularly given workload, expectations and the complexity of the work. While benefits are decent, compensation often does not feel competitive enough to offset this.

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