NBCUniversal
NBCUniversal Leadership & Management
Frequently Asked Questions
Managers at NBCUniversal are described as visible, communicative, hands-on, and focused on helping teams stay aligned during complex, high-profile work across media, technology, operations, and live events. (NBCUniversal leadership, operations, sustainability, and employee review materials)
- Visible, hands-on leadership: NBCUniversal leaders are described as showing up during critical moments, not just setting direction from afar. A senior vice president, global media operations said strong managers “never ask teams to do something they have not personally mastered” and “show up when it matters most,” pointing to leaders being on-site for Sunday Night Football, the 2026 Winter Olympics, and NBA coverage.
- Clear priorities and operating rhythms: Managers use recurring forums to keep teams aligned, including quarterly all-hands across Los Angeles, Denver, 30 Rock, and Stamford; monthly team all-hands; business, product, and AI operations reviews; and daily cross-site operational engineering reviews. A senior vice president, global media operations said these cadences help teams “reiterate priorities, drive accountability, validate or challenge roadmaps, and share organization-wide updates.”
- Accountability through measurable goals: Leadership support is tied to operational clarity and performance standards. In Global Media Operations, teams track reliability as a core measure of credibility, including “five nines” reliability for on-air systems and “four nines” in media operations. The team reported hitting both marks in 2025, reinforcing a management culture focused on accountability, trust, and execution.
- Engaged senior leadership: NBCUniversal leaders are also described as active participants in long-term business goals. A VP of operations, engineering and sustainability said senior leaders meet quarterly, ask strong questions, and drive their teams to deliver on sustainability goals, calling that level of engagement “unique” and “very special.”
- Accessible Managers: External reviews describe management as accessible, positive, supportive, and willing to listen, with some employees citing accommodating policies, respectful teams, and professional development. (Indeed, Glassdoor, and Comparably)
External Signals:
- Leadership Approval: 80% approve of NBCUniversal’s CEO on Glassdoor. (Glassdoor)
- Culture Rating: NBCUniversal has a 4.1/5 overall culture rating on Comparably. (Comparably)
- Positive Employee Sentiment: 78% of NBCUniversal employee reviews on Comparably were positive. (Comparably)
- Recommended Employer: 78% of employees would recommend NBCUniversal to a friend. (Glassdoor)
- Best Companies Recognition: Comcast NBCUniversal ranked No. 10 on Fortune and Great Place to Work’s 2024 100 Best Companies to Work For list.
Bottom line: Managers at NBCUniversal support employees by staying visible, setting clear priorities, reinforcing accountability, and helping teams deliver through major business moments, while employee reviews suggest the experience can vary by team and manager.
Leaders at NBCUniversal communicate goals and expectations through recurring business reviews, cross-site operating rhythms, all-hands forums, clear reliability metrics, and direct leadership engagement during high-priority work.
- Regular communication cadences: NBCUniversal uses structured forums to keep teams aligned across locations and functions. A senior vice president, global media operations described quarterly all-hands across Los Angeles, Denver, 30 Rock, and Stamford, along with monthly team all-hands, business reviews, product portfolio reviews, and AI operations reviews. These forums help leaders share priorities, clarify expectations, and keep teams focused on the work that matters most.
- Daily operational alignment: In Global Media Operations, leaders use a daily cross-site operational engineering review to align on planned maintenance, discuss outages, protect critical events, and avoid unnecessary changes to equipment. A senior vice president, global media operations described it as one of the most effective forums for keeping teams in sync on the day ahead.
- Goals tied to measurable outcomes: Leaders also communicate expectations through clear performance standards. In on-air environments, NBCUniversal’s Global Media Operations team holds itself to “five nines of reliability,” while media operations targets “four nines.” The team reported hitting both marks in 2025, reinforcing how goals are translated into measurable expectations around reliability, trust, and execution.
- Transparent strategic engagement: Senior leaders are described as active in long-term priorities. A vp of operations, engineering and sustainability said senior leaders meet quarterly, ask good questions, and drive teams toward sustainability goals. In reviews, employees also describe leadership as accessible and willing to listen, though some note that communication and priority-setting can vary by team, especially during restructuring or frequent strategy shifts. (Indeed, Glassdoor, and Comparably)
External Signals:
- Leadership Approval: 80% approve of NBCUniversal’s CEO on Glassdoor. (Glassdoor)
- Culture Rating: NBCUniversal has a 4.1/5 overall culture rating on Comparably. (Comparably)
- Employee Review Sentiment: Comparably reviews cite leadership themes such as communication, empathy, listening, and career advancement, while Glassdoor reviews note opportunities to improve transparency and priority clarity. (Comparably and Glassdoor)
- Recommended Employer: 78% of employees would recommend NBCUniversal to a friend. (Glassdoor)
Bottom line: NBCUniversal leaders communicate expectations through structured meeting rhythms, measurable operational goals, and active senior-leader engagement, with employee feedback suggesting strong alignment practices in many areas and some variation by team.
NBCUniversal's Candidate Tradeoffs
If you’re weighing whether NBCUniversal is the right fit, these are the core tradeoffs to consider.
- NBCUniversal emphasizes a process-driven organization designed to deliver consistent, reliable results, though that reflects a disciplined approach to planning and structured execution.
NBCUniversal Employee Perspectives
Here, senior leaders meet on a quarterly basis and are engaged, asking good questions and driving their teams to deliver on their goals — and that’s unique. I think that’s something that’s very special about what we have here.

What’s a quotable hallmark of good management on your team — and how is it reinforced?
A hallmark of strong management on our team is that our leaders are true experts in the work and lead by example. They never ask teams to do something they have not personally mastered, and they show up when it matters most.
During Sunday Night Football in a divisional game, anytime operators and supervisors had a question our senior director of on-air operations was right there with them, answering, coaching, and standing on the floor during every break to ensure everything ran smoothly. That level of presence is the norm among our management.
During the 2026 Winter Olympics, leaders flew in from California and Denver to be on‑site in Stamford, Connecticut so teams felt supported during a critical stretch. Earlier in the fall, our executive vice president of technical operations made the trip to Stamford for our first NBA game to show the same kind of support. Our executive team set the precedent that visible, hands-on leadership has a huge impact. Now, it’s our turn to carry that forward. We love the work, we love these teams, and we believe in being present because we experienced first-hand how meaningful that leadership was to us.
Which forum or ritual keeps priorities and expectations clear?
We rely on a few core forums and rituals to keep priorities and expectations clear, and it truly takes all of them working together.
At the organizational level, I host a quarterly all-hands that brings together our four major sites: Los Angeles, Denver, 30 Rock in New York City and Stamford. Each of my leaders also runs monthly all-hands with their respective teams to reinforce focus areas and keep everyone aligned.
Within any given month, I review the business, the product portfolio and our AI operations work. I’m always assessing whether these meetings still add value, whether the format needs to evolve or whether something should be consolidated to reduce meeting fatigue. Even with all of that in mind, having regular cadences remains essential. They allow us to reiterate priorities, drive accountability, validate or challenge roadmaps, and share organization-wide updates.
One of the first things I did after restructuring global media operations was evaluate our meeting rhythms and attendees to streamline where we could and better align now that we operate as one organization. From there, we expanded into a more outward-facing business portfolio cadence, giving stakeholders like Peacock and NBC Sports a 24/7 operational view of reliability trends, incident volume, outages and service performance.
A longstanding ritual that continues to be invaluable, originally set by our leadership team, is our daily cross-site operational engineering review. Every morning, we align on planned maintenance, discuss any outages from the previous day, and ensure we are protecting critical events and avoiding unnecessary touches to gear. It remains one of the most effective forums we have for keeping everyone in sync on what the day ahead looks like.
What part of the strategy excites people — and what metric shows progress?
What excites people most about our strategy is how clearly it connects to the metric that defines our credibility: reliability. We are a metrics-driven organization, and reliability is the standard that has earned the trust of every business we support, especially as live sports grow in scale, complexity and visibility.
In our on-air environment, we hold ourselves to “five nines of reliability,” a bar no one else in the industry sets. Five nines means 99.999 percent reliability, allowing virtually no room for failure in live, on‑air systems. In media operations, we target four nines, which means that out of 10,000 fulfilled assets, only one can have an error. These metrics resonate because they are ambitious and meaningful, and they represent a promise we make to our partners.
What makes this even more motivating is that in 2025, we hit those marks. We achieved five nines on air and four nines in media operations. That reinforces our progress and the importance of staying focused, because the moment we stop protecting reliability is the moment we risk losing the trust we have worked so hard to build.

NBCUniversal Employee Reviews

What People Are Saying About NBCUniversal
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Strategic Vision & Planning: Leadership repeatedly lays out a near-term playbook: make Peacock sustainably profitable, lean into live events and franchises, and keep theme parks as a growth engine. Public remarks also frame a “broadcast plus streaming” model with unified content stewardship to window IP across NBC, Bravo, and Peacock.
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Collaborative & Aligned Leadership: Executives describe tentpoles funneling audiences across the NBCU ecosystem and highlight cross‑promotion and a portfolio approach to reach and monetization. Recent restructuring consolidated programming under one roof and positioned Donna Langley to unify entertainment decisions, reinforcing alignment.
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Strong Execution: Marketplace signals include record upfront commitments and early sell‑outs around new NBA inventory, alongside continued momentum in Universal Destinations & Experiences. Leadership also credits flexible windowing (e.g., PVOD) with meaningful revenue, indicating execution on monetization levers.
NBCUniversal's Benefits
Defined policies promoting a professional, respectful workplace
Defined values and mission statements
Documented operating principles
Engineering team utilizes pair programming
Hosts in-person all-hands meetings
Implements team-based strategic planning
Leadership encourages open, transparent debate
Leadership is transparent and communicative
Mistakes are treated as learning opportunities
Open office floor plan to encourage communication and collaboration
Policies promote a low-ego, team-driven culture
Prioritizes mission-driven work in decision-making processes
Prioritizes real-world impact of work in decision-making processes
Promotes a people-first, social culture
Promotes a strong in-person office culture
Uses an OKR operational model to clearly define goals and priorities
Utilizes an open door policy that encourages accessibility