Boeing reviews

3.7

71% would recommend to a friend

(18,266 total reviews)
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Kelly Ortberg

76% approve of CEO

55% positive business outlook

Boeing has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 18,266 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
Mar 28, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Reasons to work at Boeing: 1) you want your advanced education fully-paid by the company 2) you have external activities that require a lot of time and you do not need work interfering 3) you just need a paycheck 4) you are incompetent and cannot cut it working intelligently or effectively elsewhere

Cons

1) seniority based promotions :: Naturally management and HR "spin" this to say they do not follow this practice but on numerous occasions that regardless of leadership or technical contribution to my projects as senior lead, I still did not receive a promotion. Reasons included a) not being at the my current position long enough; b) there were other engineers who had been waiting for a promotion longer. 2) no technical excellence :: there is little or no technical excellence remaining at the company. much of the engineering work is done from the books, with engineers being reduced to highly paid librarians for customers 3) aerospace engineering trumps all :: even though one of degrees is in the primary domain of the company, being an engineer of that domain (aerospace) trumps everything else. as a person with other degrees in software and computational engineering; I often encountered aerospace engineers who could not pass data structures 101 yet were leads for very visible, externally facing software projects. 4) everyone is a widget :: management regularly shuffles people around to different jobs as the company constantly tries to restructure. instead of making employees accountable, management instead places people in areas where they have zero experience or education that qualifies them for the position. I have seen people with zero engineering background other than act as technical editors become promoted into engineering; only to see them a few years later move to another engineering position in a startup program that requires actual engineer. Note, people with B.As in English literature are designing your airplanes you ride on. 5) lethargic, slow :: decisions that take 1 hour to 1 day in my current job have traditionally taken 6-12 months at the Boeing company. 6) drowning in people :: Q: How many Boeing engineers does it take to screw in a light bulb? A: All of them. In my current position we are empowered to make business decisions and enact solutions on a regular basis. More so, many customer-facing initiatives are started and finished in a day. I have seen similar functionality started at Boeing with 6 or more engineers and take 12-18 months. 7) there is no IT :: With the exception of IDS (Boeing's Integrated Defense Systems), if you wish to do anything remotely involved with software then this is not a good company to work for. Programmers are not trained for the work they do, or have any formal training in computer science or software engineering. If you are senior then your team will be composed primarily of people who do not about pointers or singly-linked lists. And if you are junior, you will never find anyone to help to develop your professional skills.

2.0
Mar 27, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The best reasons to work for Boeing revolve around the company benefits If you have a family or very time-consuming hobbies and do not want to dedicate a significant amount of time to work, then Boeing is a great place to be: you can log your 8 and clock out at the end of the day. The stress of the job can stay at work, and rarely do projects invade the "after work" time of the average engineer. There is flexibility in your work schedule (at least in my experience) with virtual work and flex time as necessary. The education benefits are par excellence, and if you take advantage of them make the salaries competitive in the market; adjunct to this is the availability of training and conference attendance both of which are encouraged and funded. Also, if you like to keep your stress levels low, then--barring a few notable exceptions--Boeing is the perfect place to be. And lastly, if you adore the domain, Boeing is one of the few places where you get to fully experience the aerospace culture.

Cons

Software Development Knowledge Vacuum: From the perspective of a software engineer, Boeing lacks an understanding of what is necessary to produce top-notch software Because Boeing managers do not have to have experience in the domain of their employees, it is not uncommon to see software managers who have no software experience. As a software developer, chances are that you will not have any say in the specification and design of your system, because that job will likely be handed to functional analysts or external contractors. Standards and practices are routinely ignored in favor of whatever technologies developers are familiar with. Lack of Performance-Oriented Goals: If your project fails, you might get a raise. If your project succeeds, you might get nothing. There is often an unspoken understanding of who is dead weight in a group, and who pulls the majority of the load (the former group seems much larger than the latter), however, those two groups are treated no differently, and it's not uncommon to see one of the deadwood members promoted to PM or Principle because a manager does not know what else to do with them. Problem employees are not addressed - managers wait for them to leave. Compensation: As a software engineer in Seattle, you are paid about substantially less than a software developer at a large software company. Generally speaking, there is little drive to produce. Teams are given longer-than-necessary times to execute projects (for instance, we have one year to complete about 6 weeks worth of work, currently) and there is no real reward for finishing quickly or meeting customer expectations. This is supported by a very bloated infrastructure where getting the necessary tools for a project can take weeks or months. I feel no real degree of challenge at work, and I feel like I am atrophying mentally from working here.

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.

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