JD Power reviews

3.6

69% would recommend to a friend

(555 total reviews)
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Joshua Peirez

48% approve of CEO

59% positive business outlook

JD Power has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 555 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The JD Power employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management and consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

555 reviews
1.0
May 26, 2026

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Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote work and unlimited vacation

Cons

Following the arrival of the new CEO, one of the earliest leadership changes was the quiet and unexpected replacement of the head of HR. In hindsight, however, it became evident that the move was part of a broader initiative to reshape the company’s leadership structure and redefine its operating philosophy—unencumbered. Over the past several months, much of the legacy J.D. Power leadership team has been replaced by executives from the CEO’s former organization, Sterling, an employment background screening company with a fundamentally different business model from J.D. Power’s highly complex data and analytics-driven business. As a result, the operating philosophies carried over from Sterling have been implemented in ways that have created confusion and uncertainty rather than creating new product offerings, strengthening operations, and wooing customers. While leadership transitions are common under a new CEO, the pace, scale, and lack of thoughtful execution surrounding these changes have continued to generate significant internal unease and raise broader concerns about the company’s long-term direction and stability. The current leadership team lacks experience and a thoroughly informed perspective and is over-indexed on the CEO’s vision, yet their compensation packages exceed those of their predecessors despite ongoing cost pressures across the broader organization. Most concerning is the disconnect between leadership messaging and actual execution. We are repeatedly encouraged to trust the process and embrace change, yet those who voice concerns about employee well-being, institutional knowledge, or the broader organizational impact of these transitions are noticeably marginalized or sidelined. This has been disheartening to experience, and to some extent, those who have been replaced are the fortunate ones. The greed that now rules J.D. Power knows no bounds.

2.0
May 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

JDPower employs smart, hard working people. Most of the associates want to drive revenue and make the company successful.

Cons

JDPower is not fair to its employees, and they really don't care if you've worked hard, produced, and generated strong revenue for them. Their record of treatment and promotions for women is abysmal. Specifically in FSAAS, the leadership does not advocate or care about women leaders.

1.0
May 15, 2026

Very disappointing.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote first Unlimited PTO The tenured individuals are great at what they do, and have made this company successful, anyone would be lucky to work with them. The way these individuals support the work and goals of the organization is admirable and I love they way we all work as a great team.

Cons

Change was needed, but not the type of change that has been and is taking place. New leadership encourages us to 'trust' them, but puts a target on those whom speak up, even for the greater good! Eliminating various initiatives such as DEI&B for example; sent a damaging message to employees who relied on those efforts to feel seen, heard, and safe in the workplace. HR leadership is totally ineffective, unexperienced and overly submissive to executive influence, rather than serving as a credible, independent function. There is little to no meaningful support or guidance provided to employees, and is making it difficult to succeed in their roles. Hiring and promotion decisions seem heavily biased toward individuals connected to the prior leadership team at Sterling, with significant equity being distributed in ways that raise serious concerns about fairness and judgment, unfortunately, there is no one internally to raise these concerns to-they are all friends! Leaderships decision to rescind 25 intern offers just one month before their start dates was appalling. Citing AI as part of the justification only makes the decision more concerning. Early-career software developers are exactly the type of talent that could help an organization adopt and apply emerging AI tools effectively—this move suggests a lack of strategic thinking rather than progress. The stated “two-year plan” cannot come soon enough. While I hope I'm wrong, if this leadership team remains in place, there is a real risk of long-term damage to the organization. The ongoing loss of experienced employees and institutional knowledge is significant and appears to be undervalued or ignored, Benefits could be better

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