EchoStar reviews

3.0

41% would recommend to a friend

(568 total reviews)
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Charlie Ergen

28% approve of CEO

40% positive business outlook

EchoStar has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 568 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The EchoStar employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Telecommunications industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

568 reviews
1.0
Apr 23, 2014

Good people in Co-Workers, Horrible Toxic Management

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Overall good benefits and salaries are on the lower end but are coming to standard slowly

Cons

The environment is toxic. There is a bully-victim culture. The different teams do not work well together, and there is open antagonism between different teams. Managers are openly insubordinate to senior managers and badmouth other teams. That can make it difficult to interface with other departments. There are very limited opportunities for professional growth. Most of the long time employees have found their niche and have no incentive to train new people. As a new engineer your responsibilities will be mostly technical writing and administrative tasks. There is a feeling that if too much effort is put in to training new people, they will leave the company to get another job sooner. There is a strong emphasis on "the way we've always done things". EchoStar does not want to invest the time in keeping their processes up to date. There is a lot of employee turnover. The salaries tend to be on the low end of the industry. Be proactive. Be on time, and start meetings on time. Maintain an organized work area. Learn to offer people constructive, timely feedback. An internet personality test that says you're introverted is not a valid excuse to fail to communicate with your employees. Make it happen. Create one set of standards, clearly communicate them to your teams, and apply them across the board to everybody. If a subject matter expert can't articulate the steps in their processes, it's a problem. They need to build those skills or work with someone who can do those things for them. If a process is inefficient, it should be reevaluated and streamlined.

1.0
Feb 13, 2025

A Lot of Discipline and No Respect

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Immediate management care about their people. They strive for you and your team to do better and grow. I would follow some of my immediate leadership.

Cons

This company has a fear-based culture that enstills a lack of trust among its workers. The founder is the chairman, and everything still routes through him. He has eyes on everything, including payment approvals and promotions. They will say the company culture has certain values, but in reality the main value is "discipline." We must be in the office, and your time is tracked. However, it is made sure this is not put in writing. Time in the office equates to productivity only. We all guess that 40 hours is what is expected. But people have speculated is that it's actually 42 1/2 hours per week that they prefer. You have to be in office by 9 and I was told they want you here til 4 at the earliest. Again, I am not certain. Otherwise you fear for your longevity here. We have to guess because it's not in writing. Changes trickle down swiftly through management instead. I've even heard online college experience gets deprioritized. Loyalty goes only one way as well. I have seen people be walked out for putting in a two weeks notice. Benefits are also minimal and not competitive. You get minimal PTO and have to resort to using it instead of having flexible leadership. Managing-up is quite difficult because whatever the founder says goes down the chain. It's a very stubborn culture from the top. The general workforce here is not seen as mature from the top. They monitor quite a bit of activity here and changes are swift and sudden. There are dashboards for leadership showing how many people buy in to Echostar products. We fear the less you have, the less you are valued. There is a complete lack of transparency by design. People complain and are in sour moods here quite often. This place has a reputation of being a hard place to work for a reason.

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EchoStar Response
1y
Thank you for sharing your thoughts and concerns. We understand that the feedback you've provided reflects some significant challenges, and we genuinely appreciate your openness in addressing these issues. At Echostar, we deeply value our employees and understand that an environment built on trust and respect is essential for everyone to thrive. Our goal is always to foster a culture where collaboration, transparency, and growth are prioritized. We take your feedback seriously, especially regarding the balance between discipline and autonomy, and the importance of clear communication and expectations around time and work culture. Thank you again for your feedback—it helps us improve and move in the right direction. We are committed to making meaningful changes and ensuring that your concerns are addressed. If you would like to share more details, we encourage you to reach out to our HR team at HR@echostar.com.
1.0
Apr 6, 2018

Why do the good people leave?

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good people have worked here, and they quit so fast we don't know what's going on.

Cons

Bad people stay and are rewarded for their terrible attitudes - toxic environment and if you want to be happy - do not work here.

Viewing 10 - 12 of 568 Reviews

Glassdoor has 624 EchoStar reviews submitted anonymously by EchoStar employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if EchoStar is right for you.