Applied Composites reviews

3.0

37% would recommend to a friend

(135 total reviews)

Marc Duvall

29% approve of CEO

33% positive business outlook

Applied Composites has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 135 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Applied Composites employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

135 reviews
5.0
Oct 11, 2017

Highly Recommend

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great company to work for. Co-workers are top notch, great environment, many opportunities for growth, there have been many internal promotions in the last few months. You get out of the company what you put in. Show up daily, on time, work hard, and it will be noticed. The work we do here matters and makes a difference. There have been some recent changes and they are improving the company and the culture change is welcomed. Upper management has been meeting with us individually and I feel like I'm being heard, as improvements have already been addressed from the feedback, or are a work in progress. It's nice to see some of the drama/negativity leaving. The company meetings are good, it's nice to hear an overview of what's going on from a higher level. It's good that there is now paid time off in the first year for employees.

Cons

Training could use some updating. That's the only one I could think of.

4.0
Oct 10, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

great hours, well accommodated pay (for those who actually come to ace to work) great people and projects

Cons

The high school demeanour the people bring to the work place.

2.0
Oct 8, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Really great christmas party, some really fantastic co-workers on the shop floor, regular schedual hours, occationally relaxing work itsself. Plus you get to keep the toolbox they force you to buy for $200 when you either walk the hell out or get fired out of no where.

Cons

I have been with this company for over a year now, and while I do generally enjoy my day to day, I have become so frustrated with my management that I am posting this just hoping a higher up sees it and actually hears what I'm trying to say. The company credo is a lie. Things are often far behind schedule, forcing the entire shop floor to push through extremely low quality parts. A month or so ago, employees from the shop floor where having one-on-one meetings with Leigh Sargent's current group of henchman, the first shift laminate lead specifically told people on his shift that "some things need to be kept in house". The same shift lead is responsible for a significant amount of scrap, and has been training his employees incorrect corner cutting processes, followed closely by his making excuses and talking himself out of owning up to his mistakes. The second shift lead had a bad habit of not being in the room when you needed him. I believe, though, that the second shift lead is the only qualified manager who knows what he is talking about and cares about the job (at least his crew). Promotions are non existent unless you manage to be in the right place at the right time and you are a straight white male. Raises are small and seldom handed out, and when they are, it is on a favoritism basis. 'Company costs' are sited as the reason for being unable to keep up with rising cost of living. Everyone I work with is living paycheck to paycheck unless they are able to work at least an entire shift of overtime a week (which was recently impossible; overtime was shut down because of lack of work). Sexism is a daily occurrence. Snide comments (heard by management, ignored) about female bodies, chatty women ( women being told not to work near one other while a group of men stand in a group for LITERAL hours ON THE CLOCK while working slowly, if at all. A female coworker was passed up for the lead position, even though she had been with the company longer, had a lower scrap rate through her career, is currently in school for engineering, and had been proven to be a more effective trainer and leader. Have seen a male coworker touching women without their permission (rubbing backs, 'fixing' articles of clothing on women he had never spoken a word to) all while he was on the clock and in a part of the building he wasn't even supposed to be in for any reason. Racism is absolutely another daily occurrence. We recently had a black woman walk out because a white female coworker had a noose hung in her toolbox, and after it was reported to HR, the white woman was not reprimanded further than being told to remove to noose. Now that the black coworker has left, the noose is hanging right back where it was, proudly. A man with two engineering degrees is working a cut table making only slightly more than me while we have engineers making over $100,000 who copy and paste incorrect processes into important paperwork and refuse to make necessary changes if it includes them leaving their cubical. Of course, this can't be said for all, there are at least two that really do all they can. As we often hear in company meetings, the numbers speak for themselves. We have employees who will milk a part for all its worth, spend entire days to do a part that should have been done in a few hours, day in and day out, and no one cares. People that consistently ignore processes, put inspector stamps on parts that they have not even glanced at, spend more of the day walking table to table gossiping, and NO ON CARES. No one can afford to care because our turnover rate is horrendous. People start this job and either realize they have entered a mess and leave right away, or stay until they can find something better. If you are planning on working here, buyer beware.

Viewing 112 - 114 of 135 Reviews

Glassdoor has 143 Applied Composites reviews submitted anonymously by Applied Composites employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Applied Composites is right for you.