Great place to work and play! - Engineering Manager Trimble Employee Review

5.0
May 26, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people and the environment are great and it really feels like a community. If you are an active person theis is the place for you as there are a number of activity groups around the company including runners, bikers, and triathletes that get together on lunch hour and after work to play. The environment is very open and there are very few barriers to get face time with upper management, as long as you are willing to approach them. Startup environment in which you are often expected to wear many hats.

Cons

Due to the reactive nature of the company you can sometimes get pulled in conflicting directions. The floor plan is very open in Colorado, some people dislike this, I love it.

Explore other reviews about Trimble

5.0
May 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

great company with great people around.

Cons

so far it has been very well

1.0
Jun 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are not any pros to working for Trimble at this time. Especially if you reside in the US. The current CPO thinks we cost too much and AI can do it.

Cons

Severe Leadership Instability: Navigating four different managers in under a year makes it impossible to maintain consistent alignment on goals, strategy, or expectations. You are constantly adapting to shifting management priorities rather than executing a stable product vision. "Sink or Swim" Culture: Onboarding is virtually non-existent, particularly for highly complex legacy platforms. There is a severe lack of role advocacy and functional coaching. When explicit requests for training are made, they are met with a generalized mandate to "get it done" without providing the necessary executive backing or cross-functional support. The "Generalist" Efficiency Trap: There is intense corporate pressure for product leaders to operate as generic generalists across highly technical, domain-specific platforms. This dilutes subject matter expertise and slows execution. Shifting Goalposts: Performance baselines are inconsistent. You can receive formal documentation from one manager stating you have made "considerable progress on all goals," only to have the organization introduce vast, entirely uncommunicated role metrics for the first time via sudden administrative performance processes. Systemic failures caused by legacy processes are frequently misattributed to individual execution.

3
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