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York Space Systems

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Career Growth Opportunities, But Serious Structural Problems That Drive Talent Away - Mission Operations Engineer York Space Systems Employee Review

1.0
Dec 16, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Day to day engineers and most mission leads are good to work with. A new operations management structure could lead to improvements. Operations training is generally effective and useful. Newly hired operators come onto console ready to fly. Opportunity to get clearances.

Cons

In my experience, York is poorly run in general but Mission Operations has the lowest morale of any group I have worked for. Processes are immature or ignored, staffing is inadequate, and expectations are constantly changing with little notice. Issues that should be addressed through planning and coordination are instead handled reactively, often during critical operations (including day of launches). When things go wrong it often felt like engineering leadership looks for blame rather than solutions, and lessons learned rarely translate into real improvements. Human Factors design issues in operations are normalized. Even small improvements like having decent chairs or extra monitors are ignored. Your small headaches will turn into real morale issues. Feedback seems to flow in one direction and failures are often pushed downward while leadership avoids ownership. Strong performers burn out quickly, while poor managers remain in place or are promoted, creating an unending cycle of attrition and low morale. Culture-wise, York often rewards availability over competence. Engineers with no communication or management skills are given management jobs. Long hours, last minute schedule changes, and expectations of unpaid overtime are normalized. Questioning decisions or pushing back on unsafe or impractical timelines is discouraged, which is concerning in an environment where mission success depends on disciplined processes and clear authority. You will be told that hard work is rewarded but when OT pay is promised, it has not been granted after work is completed. While there are talented, hardworking people at York, many of them are burned out or actively looking to leave. Career growth feels arbitrary and promotion decisions are confusing. Recognition is inconsistent, and retention appears to be a low priority. The company relies heavily on employees’ passion for space to compensate for poor planning, weak leadership, and a culture that prioritizes appearances (Rockies Sponsorship) over execution (functioning satellites).

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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