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York Space Systems

Is this your company?

Stay FAR FAR AWAY! - Senior Product Designer York Space Systems Employee Review

1.0
Nov 24, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits and York covers all health insurance premiums.

Cons

Work Environment • When I first started, I had to fight tooth and nail just to get the design software I needed to do my job. I actually had to create my first few wireframes using PowerPoint, which is absurd. • Getting approval for basic hardware like larger flat-panel monitors—a standard need for design work—was also a huge hurdle. A good company should provide employees with the tools they need to do their jobs, no questions asked. Unless an expense is excessive, there’s no reason to be stingy over a $200–300 monitor. • There seems to be at least one person in IT who enjoys holding authority over hardware and software requests. It often felt like power-tripping for its own sake. Culture • The culture at York is terrible, and leadership knows it. They’ve made no effort to retain employees or fix the systemic issues.  ◦ Even HR is aware of this. The fact that York never responds to Glassdoor reviews says everything—they simply don’t care. • The turnover rate is astounding. The manager I initially reported to left after about a month. Several developers followed soon after, and the exodus never slowed down.  ◦ In under three years, I reported to six different managers, which is absurd.  ◦ The original product team I joined essentially dissolved due to turnover and constant restructuring. Without a stable product team, there’s been no clear direction or vision.  ◦ Eventually, the other designer and I ended up reporting to a lead developer—not an ideal setup for building strong products, especially since he had no managerial experience.  ◦ During multiple reorganizations, we were completely overlooked. No one discussed career growth or promotions with us, even as others around us advanced. • York implemented a mandatory three-day in-office policy over a year ago, which was completely unnecessary. When I started, I worked almost fully remote and came in only as needed—it worked great. The entire product team functioned well remotely, stayed productive, and met deadlines.  ◦ The belief that employees must be in an office to be productive is outdated. York’s decision to follow the return-to-office trend shows how little they care about what actually works for their teams.  ◦ It also felt like they just wanted to justify the expensive office space in Greenwood Village.  ◦ Some people may not work well from home, and that’s fine—address those cases individually. Don’t punish everyone else because of a few bad apples.  ◦ I was far more productive and happier working from home, and I know many others felt the same. • Let’s also talk about the York x Rockies sponsorship. Instead of spending millions of dollars every year to sponsor a baseball team, how about giving employees better bonuses?  ◦ Last year’s bonuses were around 3 percent, which barely covers the cost of living increase.  ◦ I’m sure the C-level executives still received their usual hefty bonuses.  ◦ Take care of your employees first. Prioritize them over sponsoring a struggling baseball team.  ◦ To make it worse, when the deal was announced, employees still had to pay for Rockies swag. Nothing was free—not even a hat or shirt. Design • York doesn’t value the software product or user experience at all. The focus is entirely on customer mission needs, with no real concern for product quality. • They continue to pay an outside design agency to create mission logos, maintain an outdated website, and produce marketing materials—even though they had two in-house designers with strong branding experience who could have handled it all and saved money.  ◦ The Dragoon mission logo, for example, is one of the worst designs I’ve ever seen. It looks like a mash-up of bad clipart and early AI-generated art. • If you have an in-house design team, use them. We would have loved to refresh York’s website—which looks like it’s from the late 1990s—and design better mission badges ourselves. Do yourself a favor and stay far far away from this company. It’s not going to get any better.

Explore other reviews about York Space Systems

5.0
May 19, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Motivated and ambitious employees are rallying together at York for honorable satellite missions for government contracts and commercial. It is an extremely collaborative work environment where you can walk up to the desk of a coworker that wants to help you succeed. It’s an environment of “doers” that want to collaborate and work hard. York also encourages new ideas and innovations and there is no red tape to get through to try new ideas. It’s a breath of fresh air to be encouraged to try new solutions and ideas in the workplace! Benefits are great with being fully employer paid and higher than average holidays off (MLK, Presidents’ Day, Juneteenth, day after thanksgiving, Christmas Eve, etc in addition to standard)

Cons

Growing rapidly is hard for any company. York could put more effort into keeping strong talent in all departments.

3.0
Jul 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They have accomplished much as a new space technology company and been successful at winning contested business. They continue to invest in the company vision and roadmap through M&A. They've found a niche they're really good at. Good benefits. Lots of good people throughout the ranks. Free coffee.

Cons

Definitely an inner circle of leadership that doesn't communicate well. Not a lot of interest in personnel development and growth. There can be a blame and shame culture during high-stress times. Not a lot of recognition or appreciation for long hours of hard work. Leadership doesn't like to be challenged. A lot of paranoia and secrets. Don't expect promotions unless you're willing to make York your top life priority. There are a couple of pretty poor leaders who seem to be retained because of personal friendships.

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