Apple reviews

4.2

80% would recommend to a friend

(43,048 total reviews)
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Tim Cook

86% approve of CEO

73% positive business outlook

Apple has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 43,048 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
Apr 21, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1) smart people; 2) great products; 3) discounts of the great products; 4) good health plans; 5) good diversity; 6) you will learn tons of apple technology

Cons

All of your hard earned expertise and well-honed instincts count for nothing. Some groups may be different but in many you are graded on how many bugs you fix how quickly, not how many you examine, or resolve in other ways but how many code is changed for. No matter what your expertise eveyone has to prove themselves in the same trenches. This is disaster if you are older but very experienced. Few 50+ or even 40+ software engineers can sling code as fast as their 20 or 30 year peers or self. There is little acknowledgment of different skills and needs. If you are at a more senior level you are also expected to do this while impressing Apple with you creativity and grasp of cross functional areas and cross-functional interaction. Never mind creativity takes time and experiments and management support you haven't earned in the salt mine yet. As a software environment I found Apple very chaotic and poorly organized. Each release, every part of the software practically may change at once and throughout the entire period. Little or no layering or getting the base layers solid for the next level of development. Constant eating of dogfood. Sometimes you can't get your own work down for long stretches because of bad internal builds. Oh yeah, you are often expected to install and attempt to work on several new builds a month. There is little or no internal documentation or formal software design whatsoever. Just a lot of bright programmers flaying away for the most part. Sad, so much brain power wasted. The secrecy is so bad you are not allowed to know things that have direct bearing on your own area and even on your success. The only documentation of much of the software is in the bug tracking system and in mail and all ad hoc. As you struggle to fix your quota of bugs you learn to find the minimal patch that works without blowing things up. This leaves the software a shoddy non-cohesive patchwork over time. Apple is arrogant as hell or rather some of its VPs and Jobs himself dictate how many things should be done that many of its senior engineers know is the wrong way to proceed. Apple has a serious phobia about using good database technology and shipping same. Core Data is good as far as it goes but that isn't all that far as far as db capabilities. It is oriented to one app only. In general Apple has a very App centric view. And senior management loves files. Lots and lots of little files - even one per record. It is the model they based Spotlight and to a decree, Time Machine on. The industry knows this is not the way to go but it seems Apple has to periodically reinvent the wheel badly and call it great.

1.0
Jul 18, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The best reason to work for Apple is that you will get to see your products go to market almost every year. If you get a strong team that likes to follow process (and there aren't very many of these types of teams), then you will be happy. If you can still get stock options, you'll get a good return on your investment.

Cons

It is a completely dysfunctional organization with almost no memory of lessons learned. The products are very challenging to complete when given minimal time and subpar resources. If you're not in the iMac or iPhone groups, then count on being the last priority when it comes to resources.

2.0
Sep 25, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Get to work on industry leading technology; few jobs will involve technology which reaches as many people as the hardware and software Apple produces Reasonable pay, but good benefits (on-site doctor, good health plan, etc.) Challenging work environment with a high potential for personal development

Cons

Absolutely no work/life balance; arguably one of the worst among large Bay Area companies. You should be OK not seeing your family and friends very often, and it helps to have a personality that thrives on constant stress and work. Schizophrenic upper and middle management, changing priorities constantly and treating engineers like disposable resources. Release goals are often unachievable, and code is often hurriedly thrown together. Software quality suffers as a result. Poor facilities: employees often have no place to park, and are all but required to eat at the on-campus cafeteria (which is not free) to avoid losing parking spots. It wasn't uncommon to have to spend 30 minutes hunting for parking in residential Cupertino after getting back from a doctor's appointment. Campus is generally overcrowded with work environments that aren't conducive to productivity.

Viewing 67 - 69 of 43,048 Reviews

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