Boeing reviews

3.7

71% would recommend to a friend

(18,287 total reviews)
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Kelly Ortberg

77% approve of CEO

55% positive business outlook

Boeing has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 18,287 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Boeing employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aerospace & Defense industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

18K reviews
1.0
Aug 23, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Health benefits along with tuition. That is the only motivating factor for people staying. Short commute

Cons

Managers that do not know how to think outside the box and can be hesitant when ideas are offered. Creativity seems very limited, and in order for employees to flourish that needs to be encouraged. Favoritism and perception issues especially in hiring continue to exist. I recall one of the other OA's complaining about attending a meeting about how to record bathroom breaks on your timesheet. This seems like a waist of time, couldn't this have been accomplished in an email?

3.0
Apr 13, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Compensation is decent and the benefits are great. There are a number of challenges available, but the culture tends to avoid change and fight "out of the box" thinking. If a person is allowed to be really creative, then, no pun intended, the sky is the limit. There is some REALLY neat technology being developed at Boeing. And there are some fabulous managers, in various divisions. In addition, the company uses, and encourages the use of, modern technology. Telecommuting, hoteling, etc. are all encouraged and financially supported by the Boeing.

Cons

Unfortunately, the Boeing culture does not reward 'new' thinking or even questions as to 'why?'. There are pockets of the company that truly does encourage divergent options, but those are rare. Senior Management tend to reward like thinking and overlook those who question the status quo....even when those questions are professional, appropriate, and highly thoughtful. The Boeing legacy is rich in developmental history, technology, and foresight, however, the current environment does not even recognize the value of contributions from acquired organizations (e.g. Hughes, North American, Rocketdyne, etc.). In truth, there is still exists quite a bit of the Boeing vs. Mac Dac/Hughes/etc. mentality. Additionally, the management emphasis is on cultural diversity, but it is defined in gender and ethnic terms and not by experience or professional background. There are other aerospace organizations that place a higher value on diversity of experience than Boeing. And that will ultimately be Boeing's downfall. Few if the senior managers ever get out and spend any time with the employees. They tend to be isolated and removed from day-to-day issues, pressures, problems and opportunities. For example, the head of the technology division did not speak to his 25,000 employees until he had been in the job for 18 months. And then the communication was via a one way web-cast. And finally, employees are rarely listened to. The words and music are good, but they are not backed up by actions. There is extensive talk about knowledge management, information access and sharing, and shared values/culture. In practice however, there is little sharing and a lot of information hording. One has to know to who to talk to in order to get information.

4.0
Mar 27, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Boeing has the best benefits around. 100% tuition payment (not reimbursement, they pay it upfront), wide range of healthcare choices such as blue shield, kaiser, healthnet (my PPO plan is free), and generous 401k matching. I personally have great management in my organization, but it varies throughout the company.

Cons

Opportunities for fast paced growth/promotions. There is definately the mentality, "I have been here X amount of years, you need to as well" before you can get the same promotions. One of the strict requirements for level promotions is X amount of years experience. I think it should be based on a mix of BOTH knowledge/expertice in your field and years of experience. Other downsides include old legacy systems (and the employees generally aren't technology savvy), poor mix of age demographics (a quarter of the people on my floor are at or near retirement age, while there is only a handful of college graduates), and resistance to change.

Viewing 484 - 486 of 18,287 Reviews

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