Great company, great people, great products and awesome place to advance one's career. - Anonymous employee Intuit Employee Review

5.0
Feb 17, 2011
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The founder Scott Cook is still awesome, very active and continually sets the tone of the company to focus on delighting customers and driving innovation. The engineering was (may still be) world class and the focus on customer understanding is second to none. The scale of technical challenges at Intuit is exciting...think about what it takes to assure turbotax is working the night before tax day or the challenges of having a product set as diverse as QuickBooks, Quicken, payroll, tax (pro and consumer), healthcare etc. and what it takes to make them all work together for the user, the enterprise backend and the employee wanting or needing to work on more than one offering.

Cons

In the last 2 years current employees have voiced concern over a growing trend to outsource more engineering work overseas. Of course Intuit needs to compete globally so Intuit needs to source globally. But working and managing outsourced teams is tough and will not get you the development velocity and rapid execution of small scrum teams located in the same office so expect some frustration and process changes when your "US attrition" gets back filled in India.

Explore other reviews about Intuit

5.0
Jul 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of great, smart, hard working people to work with! There are learning resources and opportunities to take ownership

Cons

Systems and reporting could use some improvements

2.0
Jul 11, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing benefits and good people

Cons

Culture has shifted drastically. The expectation now is do more for less. What used to be above and beyond is now just achieving expectations. You're expected to absorb the work of everyone let go. You do 4 peoples' jobs, but the concept of promotions or pay raises is out of the question. Trust from customers and employees toward leaders is completely broken. The only prosperity being powered is the prosperity of shareholders and investors.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All