Work anywhere but for this company. - Engineering Novelis Employee Review

1.0
Dec 30, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paycheck appeared on the first and the fifteenth, beyond that there are no pros worth mentioning.

Cons

This is a world straddling company, best known in the entire industry for producing two things: aluminum and nuclear grade toxic work environments. The “leadership team” is obsessed with its own power and granting themselves all sorts of perks, with managers surrounding themselves with their favorite sycophants, creating more cliques than a high school cafeteria. People are treated like cogs in a wheel, replaced on the whim of whatever dictator has wrestled control of that particular department. The “corporate values” only apply to those that management wish to remove, never to themselves. Rules for thee but not for me.

Explore other reviews about Novelis

5.0
Jul 9, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It is a good company

Cons

No cons except the location

1.0
May 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The strongest part of Novelis is the people at the working level. There are a lot of smart, capable, and genuinely friendly employees across the business who are willing to collaborate and help each other succeed in a challenging environment. The company also offers a relatively flexible hybrid work policy compared to many industrial/manufacturing organizations, which helps with work-life balance. Benefits are generally competitive and above average for the industry.

Cons

The employee experience has become increasingly difficult due to constant reorganizations, unclear ownership structures, and growing pressure to deliver more work with fewer resources. High performers are often rewarded with additional responsibilities without meaningful increases in compensation, title progression, or organizational support. Many functions operate in a constant state of firefighting, with priorities regularly shifting based on operational issues or leadership changes. There is also a disconnect between leadership messaging and the day-to-day experience for employees. Collaboration and empowerment are emphasized, but decision-making often feels centralized and reactive. Career progression can feel inconsistent and heavily dependent on timing, politics, or leadership turnover rather than performance alone. Morale across the organization has suffered as workloads have increased while teams remain lean. Employees are frequently expected to absorb responsibilities outside of their original scope, and strategic or long-term thinking often takes a back seat to immediate operational pressures.

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