Not a bad environment - Engineer Starkey Employee Review

4.0
May 20, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Starkey is stable and makes money. Many people have worked most if not all of their careers here, and they could certainly do worse. It's family oriented. Literally. It seems like husband/wife or father/son working at Starkey is quite common. It seems like a great environment if your background is audiology or digital signal processing or RF engineering especially if you have an advanced degree in one of those disciplines. The company is conservatively managed so they weathered the 2008 recession reasonably well. Pay and benefits are competitive. The revenue sharing plan is a nice recent addition. EP is a large campus with decent amenities including two cafeterias. The hiring process is pretty strong so there are very few bad employees.

Cons

On some projects, processes are weak. Multi-million dollar projects are kicked off with documentation lacking. It seems in some instances Starkey doesn't understand or doesn't believe that the earlier you find defects the cheaper it is to fix them. Creating documents with an adequate level of detail and then reviewing them with the appropriate people is a good way to identify these problems early. Key projects/products have been outsourced, creating a void of knowledge among those that maintain the product. Outsourcing results have been disappointing, ending up with significant development still performed in-house. Short grey cubicles made out of cheap countertop material - made in-house for some reason. In many areas these cubes are crammed so close together that only one person can walk the aisle between them. There's virtually no place to store your technical books so they get left at home. The revenue sharing is definitely nice, but not always equitable. What I mean is that you are much better off if you contribute a little to every program release than if you contribute heavily to one program release only. The formula that is used will cap the amount given to an individual for any one program release. This means someone who works on an 18-month project will get a bonus only for that program release and it is very likely to be capped. Another employee who works on 3 6-month programs may put in the same level of effort in those 18 months, but will receive 3 smaller bonuses totaling more than the first employee's bonus because they never hit the cap. The 401k/ESOP match is given in company stock. This is not ideal because the company is private (i.e. the stock price changes once a year) and because you end up having too much invested in one company. You depend on Starkey for a paycheck and now you depend on Starkey for investment returns (and the hearing aid industry is likely slow growth). I'd rather have the 401k/ESOP match under my control to invest somewhere else. Starkey is not going to end up like Enron, but you get the general idea of why you want to diversify. New employees must also wait a long time before they are eligible to even participate with their own contributions - sometimes up to a year. Vacation time is good but not as generous as it sounds because Starkey observes fewer holidays than most companies - 6 versus 8-10 in some places.

Explore other reviews about Starkey

5.0
May 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexibility, good pay, rewarding work, great employees, private company

Cons

Some silos between departments can be difficult to work with sometimes

3.0
Jan 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Mission-Driven Impact: You get the unique satisfaction of knowing your technical infrastructure directly supports technology that restores hearing and improves the quality of life for millions. • Innovation Hub: Because Starkey integrates AI and sensors into their hearing aids, IT engineers often work with sophisticated, modern stacks that bridge the gap between traditional enterprise IT and wearable tech. • Strong Local Culture: As a privately held company with deep roots in Minnesota, Starkey offers a stable, family-oriented environment that often feels more personal than a massive, faceless tech conglomerate.

Cons

Legacy Debt: Like many established manufacturing giants, you may encounter older legacy systems and "on-prem" hurdles that can slow down the deployment of more modern, cloud-native solutions. • Corporate Rigidity: Some employees report a traditional top-down management style, which can occasionally feel restrictive if you are used to the agile, flat autonomy found in Silicon Valley-style startups. • High-Pressure Environment: Given the precision required for medical devices and global distribution, the IT uptime requirements can lead to demanding "on-call" cycles and high-stress troubleshooting windows.

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