Argo Data Software Developer reviews

1.9

21% would recommend to a friend

(13 total reviews)

Max Martin

21% approve of CEO

20% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

13 reviews
1.0
Feb 18, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Nice cubicles - My manager at least tried to give me a productive work experience - I made some good friends and contacts, but the company does not have a right to claim credit for this.

Cons

- Terrible company with terrible leadership - Old, outdated technology - Crappy compensation. Raises and bonuses are at worst nonexistent, and at best insulting - Vicious political system - This company truly does deserve a 1-star rating on everything listed below: Career Opportunities, Compensation, Work/Life balance, Senior Management, and their laughable 'Culture & Values' - As stated in the title.... The day I was laid off from this company was the best day I ever had with them. Although I had some good career moments while working, I'd never felt utter joy like how I did when I was laid off. I didn't think layoffs were supposed to feel this good but as soon as the CEO said 'You are all experiencing workforce reduction,' I immediately felt 20 lbs lighter. We were let go by around noon, so I got a nice half day back to myself. Their layoff/career placement program was also a joke. My boss also called everyone else in our department to a 3 hour meeting while employees were being laid off, so I didn't get a chance to say goodbye to my coworkers/friends. As karma would have it, my boss got the boot himself a few months later. - This is a warning to recent graduates..... This company preys on fresh college graduates who have no work experience and just don't know any better about corporate America. I should've realized this when they offered me a HIGHER salary than my initial offer, but I just couldn't have known better while so young and inexperienced. They will also force you to do development in a proprietary language that is ancient and full of errors/inconsistencies. I believe part of this is to deprive you of skills that are transferrable to other jobs so that you are forced to stay working at ARGO for longer. I remember very clearly the desperation I felt in trying to find a job as soon as I finished college. I gave in to pressure from my parents, mentors, and career counselors to take the first job that came close to my salary requirements. This turned out to be a very fatal mistake on my part. I suppose you could frame it as a positive that I was able to survive at such a vicious company for so long, but this is not the way to harden yourself and to become stronger as a person. Look up 'bonded labor,' and you will start to understand ARGO's recruiting process. They will lure you in with promises of developing software for large banks, and will do their darndest to trap you there. Furthermore, there is a good chance that working here will sour your opinion of working overall. A paycheck is not worth your soul, so don't make this mistake. There are also (quite credible) rumors that the movie 'Office Space' was based on this company. Don't be unlucky enough to find out for real.

1.0
Aug 26, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

cubicle are ok, that's it

Cons

It's like a revolving door here, attrition rate is high, seems like 2-3 per week. The technology is ancient and the skills you learn are worthless outside of the company. Product research and design seems like an afterthought, timelines are set up and you try to meet them. The longer you stay, the more your skills will become outdated. Raises are almost non existent, no cost of living raises, you can be here for two years without a single raise. Although there is a bonus plan, it is complicated and doesn't seem that anyone but upper management is eligible Other benefits are below average, you even have to stay at least two years to get a small portion of the company 401k match. Don't plan on getting any time off except vacation and sick, you won't get comp time for working overtime, no days off for treacherous icy days in the winter, and not even a couple hours off before major holidays.

1.0
Feb 17, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

All of my pros are not applicable to most other employees. I was lucky and was hired and placed on a team with a good manager and team members that didn't use the propriety ARGO language, so I had intelligent and friendly colleagues and gained useful experience. All 40 hour work weeks without needing to work overtime. That is not the case with the majority of employees.

Cons

-Senior management very disconnected, opaque, closed-doors, and unstable. Upper management does not know what is going on in lower levels and don't seem to care. -Resistant to innovation and change. Most of the base ARGO systems and software consists of 20-25 year old, poorly documented, spaghetti code in C or C++, and most of the client systems are build on either a 20 year old proprietary language or a newer proprietary web application framework that is not stable, not well documented, and mostly word-of-mouth knowledge. -Many teams still use ARGO's propriety language, which is outdated and completely useless outside of the company. -20% of the company laid off in December 2013 with no warning, despite their apparently very large cash reserve and after a massive volume of hiring in the last year. -No to little reward for meeting or exceeding expectations. Sometimes promotions don't even come with a salary raise. Promotions that do involve a raise are usually insignificant or even insulting. -Relatively low salaries, below industry and area average. -Little to no culture. Despite the best efforts of some employees, there is not an exciting or fun corporate culture here, and many employees are like drones. -Bad cross-team communication and collaboration. Differences in priorities makes getting resources from or collaborating with other teams like pulling teeth and basically requires an order from senior managers to get anything done. -Lack of talent. Many of the talented or even average employees leave because they can find better jobs elsewhere, and many of the ones that stay (but definitely not all) are arrogant and not easy to work with. So you are left with a lot of under-performers, some average and talented but arrogant employees, spattered with a small group of friendly and talented employees. -Bad company outlook. The only thing keeping the company up is the fact that its products are already so entangled with large banks that it would be very costly to go somewhere else. -Bad career advancement opportunities. It is not a meritocracy, and advancement is largely dependent on the people you know or sheer luck (in my case, both). -Very bureaucratic. The review process is overly structured, takes too long, and is largely dependent upon having the right flowery wording and hitting certain buzz words. It takes 2-4 months to even get feedback from reviews or for promotions to be decided. The CEO has to approve all promotions, which wouldn't be bad if he knew who he was promoting and didn't take 3 months to approve it. -Lack of trust between senior management and managers. The senior management does not trust their managers to make the right decisions and manage their teams correctly, leading to drawn out approval processes, lack of communication, differing expectations and priorities, and disregard for input by the managers who actually know the people working for them.

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