Engineers Stay away - Anonymous employee Starkey Employee Review

1.0
Aug 30, 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

PTO is nice but hard to use based on manager.

Cons

You need to know someone to get promoted. Salary base pay is such a joke, "Market value". Way below industry average, I have no idea where HR gets their average from. The company is in cost savings mode - some benefit programs were cut, and few groups of people were laid off, without a notice. Executive turnover is frustrating - Benefits were redone and CHr left. Benefits are very sub-par.Except PTO Work life balance doesn't exist - CTO makes a lot of promises and dates do not change. Honestly it is embarrassing working for this company with all the recent news/ bad publicity. Look up Forbes article about Starkey Hearing Technologies. Owner is distant from company.

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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