Good challenges and opportunities to learn, but recognition/reward for quality, hard work often lacking - Anonymous employee Emerson Employee Review

4.0
Mar 21, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Emerson plans fairly well, so it's stable (layoffs are rare and when they occur are smaller scale than other companies'). I've worked with many smart, hard-working people at Emerson and have had the chance to get to know several facets of the business, to interact with all levels of the organization, and to work with people all over the world.

Cons

It can be hard to get things done because the structure of the business doesn't reflect/support how Emerson markets itself (goals don't mesh with the tools/culture to achieve them). Career development/advancement can be difficult if not an engineer or in Finance. "Duties otherwise assigned" often leads to people consistently doing work that's beyond the responsibility of their position, so they're not compensated for what they really do, and they end up behind the curve on the pay scale. Diversity is also a bit of a hole; if you look at a picture of the Emerson board, it's all middle-aged white guys.

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5.0
Jun 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great work - life balance

Cons

limited growth opportunities unless willing to relocate

2.0
Jun 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great immediate supervisor and their boss. Made top-down communications tolerable. Great co-workers and great collaboration that lifted the entire team.

Cons

(1) RIF based on tenure, not performance. HR is too powerful a department, and everyone fears it. (2) Tenure made you lazy, killed creativity, initiative, and promoted a "yes" culture. (3) During COVID layoffs, CEO pay went from $3.7 million to $15.x million, while employees endured 25% furloughs for 3 months, and management 10% reduction in pay for 6 months - explain how that is reasonable. (4) CEO declared DEI as the way forward for career mobility, and a lot of young, promising talent walked out the door, including DEI-qualified minorities. (5) I was one of those minorities.

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