Apple reviews

4.1

80% would recommend to a friend

(43,044 total reviews)
avatar

Tim Cook

86% approve of CEO

73% positive business outlook

Apple has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 43,044 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Apple employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

43K reviews
2.0
Jun 25, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The insurance is the best I ever had. I have no copay. I only pay my $20 (regular doc.) or $30 (specialist) deductible and everything else is covered 100%. I had a baby and I only paid $20, total. I had another surgery which cost $35000 and it only cost me $30, total. The pay for the amount of work is not good. Read below.

Cons

The pay is less than normal for all the goals we have to complete. We have to make sure we sell the AppleCare Protection Plan to at least 3 customers out of 100, must maintain customer satisfaction goal of 80% (hard to do if customer gives a bad review for something you can't control). For instance, if a customer calls in since their brand new computer is broken and you refer to the store to get it fixed, they can give you a negative survey which in turns makes your stats come down. Now management wants you to explain why they didn't approve of your service, etc., even though the calls are recorded. They implemented a new call strategy called H2H. It entails me asking the customer permission to ask them questions (why do I have to ask them for permission if they are calling for help?), empathize with the customer (never enough empathy on your weekly reviews per manager), determine the customer's state of mind and talk to them dependant upon their personality. I must align myself with the customer (never do it since I have no idea what I am actually doing), assure the customer their issue will be resolved and make sure to clarify their resolution. You have to make sure you solve at least 70% of customer issues (hard to do when the computer needs physical work done at the store), maintain a customer satisfaction goal of 80% (also hard to do when you get bad surveys because a customer was out of warranty and didn't want to pay for support $19), you also must make sure your calls are around 14.5 minutes long (too short, you're in trouble, too long, you're in trouble). Dont expect to have a life. Mandatory OT for Christmas and other holidays. Also when there is a new product release. Good luck having a vacation during holiday time. While on the phone you get a call around every 8 seconds so it's hard to take a breather. You must type notes while talking to the customer so you can make sure to take another call. If you don't hustle between calls you know what happens, another chewing out by your manager. To top it all off you have 3 exams to take that you must pass or get fired. It's 8 hours a day training for 4 weeks. If you miss a day of training for any reason, you are fired. You do 4 hours a day of instructor led training and 4 hours just reading your own materials. If you don't read you won't pass and you will get fired. 5 people from my team didn't make it. Lastly, don't expect to advance quickly. Most managers are promoted at an average around 4 years. The bad thing is they will give a regular employee backfill (manager perks but no additional pay) to help the managers out. The backfill will review calls and critique your work and do the managers work. Most people never make it to manager even while backfilling. A guy on our team has been backfilling for over 2 years. They make it seem once you backfill the manager position opens for you. But that's a lie. They do a lot of external hiring for managers instead of inside. Last hiring spree they hired 4 external hires for manager and only 2 internal. My manager has no idea how to do my job since he was hired externally. He can't give me advice or pointers since he doesn't know. I am in the process of looking for other employment opportunities. But I will be replaced with the tap of a keyboard since most of my team has quit since starting. But that's the way it is here.

2.0
Jun 28, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Cutting edge technology with cool consumer products. Strong brand name recognition. Apple provides solid pay structure and benefits along with outstanding short and long-term stock performance. A unique work environment that embraces diversity.

Cons

The new HR leadership team from EA is running the HR and Staffing organizations (and eventually the company) into the ground. We are one of the most globally recognized brand names on the planet and this is as good as we could get? Staffing and HR folks are leaving in droves. At least 10 people have left in the last 2 months. They are firing and pushing employees out who are long-time, loyal Apple workers. They are looking for drones and trying to build an empire without considering others or the business ramifications. If you have an opinion that doesn't match theirs then you are out. These employees acquired the top engineering talent needed to make Apple products successful with great personal sacrifice; working an obscene amount of hours. This new leadership team has proven to be dishonest, self-serving, condescending, egotistical and lacking common sense. If you are considering a job in HR or Recruiting at Apple - run the other direction.

1.0
Nov 14, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Financial stability. Appears good on a resume.

Cons

- Extremely outdated tools and technology. - Poor resource allocation. - Extremely poor quality of internal tools. - Constant reorganizations make it impossible to focus on a project. - Recruiters don't care about you, they just want to fill their numbers.

Viewing 49 - 51 of 43,044 Reviews

Glassdoor has 52,639 Apple reviews submitted anonymously by Apple employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Apple is right for you.