employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Nestlé Purina U.S.

Engaged Employer

Every person is part of a team who wants to do their best. - Senior Manufacturing Software Engineer Nestlé Purina U.S. Employee Review

5.0
Nov 11, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

People are smiling, happy, always willing to help lend a hand or share knowledge to help you do your job better. The health benefits are top tier, the work is challenging, yet energizing. The Co-Workers always want to help you achieve your very best. When you first come into the company, they assign someone to you to teach you the culture, the industry, the business and what you need to know to be successful. Every so often, my boss will send me to a class to learn new skills and put them to immediate use! I have grown so much working for this company it is unbelievable how much I've grown as a result!.

Cons

We have an awesome corporate culture, a great work-life balance that I simply cannot find in other companies. It is hard to find an incentive to leave here. Every other company pales in comparison to Nestle Purina. It would be nice if we could bring our dogs to work at every company location.

Explore other reviews about Nestlé Purina U.S.

5.0
May 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Takes good care of employees. Long retention

Cons

Pay is lower as compared to similar companies

avatar
Nestlé Purina U.S. Response
1mo
It’s great to read feedback from an IT associate. We look forward to innovating alongside you!
2.0
Jun 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Excellent products, strong brands, and many talented coworkers who genuinely care about each other and the success of the business. The relationships built with peers are often the best part of working here.

Cons

The company culture has deteriorated significantly over time. When I joined over 10 years ago, Purina felt like a place where employees mattered and people genuinely cared about one another. Today, it feels increasingly driven by cost cutting, restructuring, and quarterly financial targets. Employees are expected to do more with less, resulting in constant fire drills, unrealistic workloads, and a stressful work environment. Management and HR appear disconnected from the day-to-day realities employees face and often rely on outdated approaches that no longer fit the modern workplace. Career development and succession planning receive a great deal of discussion but far less action. Advancement opportunities have become increasingly limited, and ongoing workforce layoffs create uncertainty that further impacts morale and engagement.

2
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All