Autodesk reviews

4.0

80% would recommend to a friend

(628 total reviews)
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Andrew Anagnost

80% approve of CEO

69% positive business outlook

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628 reviews

Reviews about "Compensation"

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1.0
Jul 15, 2017

Diversity doesn't bother the Company

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good Benefits and Welfare but pay is below average for non R&D.

Cons

While the company emphasize "diversity" on one hand, the company retrenched employees during Chinese New Year and D&D on the other hand. Being an MNC, the company did not care about the diversity of the employees and how much CNY means to the Chinese. Announcing the new of retrenchment before CNY and officially communicating to the impacted employees during the week after CNY had totally ruined the CNY of Chinese. Impacted employees are not treated with respect and dignity. 1 of the employees are devastated and requested to return later in the day to pack her stuff, but this request was being rejected by the rep of the company and she was sent out immediately after the communication. The company is very much driven in a way of a particular nationality, instead of doing things right the first time, they often like to trial and error although the solution is obvious. Completing task in 10 steps rather and 3 steps. They only care about the outcome, but the work smart procedure or straight to the point. Perhaps this aid to increase employment rate, hiring 5 person to do 3 persons' job.

2.0
Jul 12, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Company mission is super inspiring, and genuinely strives towards making the world a better place - Lot of awesome initiatives happening with biotech & research - Lot of work life balance - Lot of opportunities for volunteer work and extracirricular activities! - Super convenient location by BART - Lot of general facility perks, such as onsite gym and access to Pier 9 - I've lasercut a lot of stuff for side projects :) - Highly encourages making and you have access to the software for free - Company is pretty much the leader in a lot of the software we offer, so there's bragging rights :) - Lots of very smart, diverse, incredible people here! It's been incredibly humbling to work here.

Cons

This company is an old, old ship. A lot of the folks here have been here forever (10+ years) and are rooted in dated processes, unwilling to take feedback from new employees, until the new employees either quit or stay long enough to get absorbed in all those dated processes. As a younger employee, this can be intimidating - an older employee, who I introduced myself to in the kitchen one day, offhandedly told me that I probably wouldn't make it to the 4-year mark, as "millenials are noncommittal". As a designer, the work depends (understandably) on what team you're on- but being a part of a big company, you will be siloed, and a lot of the work won't be sexy visually. There's currently been a movement towards creating global UI guidelines but it's taken a very, very long time to develop and the team that is working on it hasn't permeated all of the design teams yet, it feels that any one team within the company doesn't have much reach across orgs. Generally not a huge design culture here - we host a lot of design events for the public, but internally, design thinking is still relatively new to non-designers and pushing that has been a challenge. The designers feel very disconnected, and there's often duplicate efforts happening and not a lot of communication. There have been efforts to bring us together; we have designer all-hands, but it feels that the original gusto has worn off. The company is very numbers and sales driven, and at times so ambitiously so that it costs our reputation with our customers; often I've felt the way we sell and bundle our products undermines our customer experience. Some teams do not value or put as much budget into research, or sometimes that research will be introduced too late in the pipeline for any significant design changes to be made before getting rushed into development. The people here are very transactional and often look for their own interests. When I was interviewing here, I emailed a designer on another team to ask about her interview process and her take on the culture- only to get back a reply that I should "consider what I could offer her in return" for her giving this information and that I should "think about what I'm asking for before emailing her" and that she was "tired of getting emails asking for favors without any returns". That should have been a red flag as this was very indicative of the silo culture here- asking for any help from any team that isn't yours will warrant a cold response, if any at all- and often to get any help you need to pull favors. Perhaps it's just the size of the company itself, but to me it's never felt very collaborative. The company is very frugal and when I was in the offer stage, my particular recruiter was very, very pushy about asking for my old salary and as a result, my offered salary was much lower than that of peers in my same role and level, even after negotiating up another 5k. I have some suspicions that there is a fairly large pay gap between women and POC because of the way they recruit. Also, your experience will vary widely depending on which department you are in. If you aren't in the department working on all of the software products, you don't get the same perks: we don't get any catered food, we don't have a winter holiday party, and we generally don't get invited to the celebrations the product departments host.

3.0
Jul 11, 2017

good company, substandard salaries

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- work life balance, unless you end up working in some no-go teams, but in general a family friendly company - people are pretty good, approachable and smart. - good benefits and a 6 week sabbatical on top (if you hold on for 4 years)

Cons

- Salaries in engineering well below average. - Overall lack of expertise on strategic topics like cloud and scale primarily because of the company's roots as a desktop product company. - Politics often gets in the way, teams slow, very siloed - Strict rules hindering and limiting internal mobility. On switching teams usually cannot renegotiate compensation or otherwise. - Depends on teams but internal training is rare

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