GE reviews

4.1

81% would recommend to a friend

(15,514 total reviews)
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H. Lawrence Culp, Jr.

85% approve of CEO

71% positive business outlook

GE has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 15,514 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The GE employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

16K reviews
2.0
Nov 25, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There are opportunities to gain experience in a vast sea of experiences, ranging from project planning to all aspects of component design, life analysis, FEA, sourcing, manufacturing, fleet issue and customer resolution issues on multiple professional levels. You will not come away from this job with a narrow scope of expertise. Also, Energy is broad and deep in scope. From gas, wind and steam turbines to nuclear, coal and diesel generators, the possibilities for different careers are many. Security is also a strong appeal. Energy demand is something that may change forms but will never truly disappear. Few industries offer the same long-term job security.

Cons

The processes of the company are many. They are often burdensome, blind, and out of touch with reality. However, this is not unlike other companies of this size. Red tape is a nuisance to deal with, but it also can be a strong guide to keep things moving when the way ahead isn't clear. HR operates like a black box, perhaps a broken black box, and despite the heaps of fluffy, feel-good gibberish it spits out in your daily email, it's actually pretty clueless as to it's own hypocrisy and functions as a propaganda machine. Raises are suppressed through a convoluted system of ratings amongst peers, standing in view of the industry average, time with the company, background, and lastly, performance. It does not pay to perform. A set pool of money is pre-determined and the lower management is burdened with ranking their direct reports against each other to decide who gets 3% vs 4% or 5%. Naturally, it pays to be a favorite like any other system governed by humans, but overall, it's very difficult for them to play favorites due to the way the system is setup. In short, hire in at the highest rate you can negotiate, be prepared for raise cycles ranging from 14-18 months (and sometimes longer) and try to move to another role every 2 years to prevent your salary from losing in the race with inflation. It is very difficult to ever actually get anything done due to the massive amount of people that have a say in any major decision. Some parts of the business (MPE) can hold a project up for over 6 months while it's waiting in their queue. Major changes happen very slowly and individual contributors very seldom have any real communication or relationship with their managers.

5.0
Oct 14, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You get the chance to work with some of the smartest people across industry. The management is top notch, and the grooming for the top performers keeps the pipeline full. It's not uncommon to see GE alumni in top executive jobs across the country. In my opinion, this is only because GE has an over supply of leaders, and unfortunately, there isn't enough room for all the talent that is brought up.

Cons

Being a top performer generally entails more than 40 hour weeks. GE does like to run lean and efficiently, meaning the peak times will require you and your team to give a little more than your salary covers. Also, the new focus on specialization and expertise has narrowed the career paths somewhat. Cross-functional opportunities are much harder to find.

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