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General Dynamics Mission Systems

Engaged Employer

General Dynamics Mission Systems reviews

3.8

67% would recommend to a friend

(1,868 total reviews)
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Chris Brady

70% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

General Dynamics Mission Systems has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 1,868 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The General Dynamics Mission Systems employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aerospace & Defense industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
Aug 24, 2015

It's Great (if you're okay with favoritism and non-ethical practices)

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It's a paycheck. Benefits are okay, but expensive. [Really struggling to come up with enough "Pros" to meet the 20 word minimum]

Cons

No raises/promotions unless you're one of the favorites No recognition for hard work Certain employees are allowed to come and go as they please, while everyone else is held to a strict standard Management does not bother to interact with employees they consider unimportant (which is everyone EXCEPT the favorites) No growth opportunities Obvious timecard fraud by management and employees

2.0
Jun 30, 2015

Where ambition goes to die

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Most projects have depressed managers who won't ask you to work more than the minimum 40 hours because they themselves are tired of it.

Cons

If you want to be more than a code monkey, you have ambition, want to take on more responsibility or lead, then look elsewhere. They are just looking for people to crank out code right now and have no money or space on projects for anyone who wants to do more than that.

1.0
Jun 11, 2015

Interesting work. No career development.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The work can be very interesting because of the contracts that are won. The government has some interesting problems to solve. One can learn a lot about a structured way to survive in the contracting world. Lots of disciplined process. Pretty good at finding employees work when a contract dries up. They have some decent company sponsored, internal training. If you don't work at a customer sight, work life balance can be top notch. Get the work done and everything is fine. However...if you work at a customer site, be prepared to burn a lot of PTO due to the customer closing their facility for federal and customer holidays. GD contracts negotiated to stay competitive at the cost of employee work life balance.

Cons

There is a lot of lip service from management about changing things up and improving them. Don't hold your breath. They been promising the same for many years. They've yet to pull through. Every change is ultimately to increase the margins and earn corporate bigger bonuses, which are based on profits. GD Corp. CEO's compensation is over 19,000,000 up from 14M a couple years back. Career development: There aren't any real, ethical lines for promotion. Sure, you can take on more responsibility for the same pay and level. They like that. Any higher positions you apply for will be lowered to a lateral move, per company policy. They are fine with you doing the work, just don't expect to get paid for it. The programs for the "select few" have resulted in high turnover. The program participants often leave as soon as they don't have to pay anything back. This favoritism, combined with lack of opportunity for the rest who strive for more also results in turnover. A few years ago, they divided all the levels into three and promised to promote people three times as often. It was a lie. It was to keep rates down, improve our pricing position, and increase profits for corporate (multi-million dollar bonuses are tied to profits). Compensation: Enjoy the salary you negotiate when you come on board because it won't be changing. If you want to actually get market corrections later, be prepared to "fight dirty" and get external offers for negotiations. It is a shame that one has to participate in questionable ethics to get the company do the right, ethical thing for its employees. Education: The majority of people that I know who have finished company funded MS degrees have stayed just long enough to not have to pay anything back. Medical plans: We used to have great plans. Now, they are all high deductible. Why? Because GD is focused on elderly care. They want new talent desperately, but don't take steps to attract them retain the young talent they have. New families cost money. GD health plan is self-funded. The more people use it, the more profits are siphoned. An HDHP fixes it.. Their plans cover everything, as long as the employees are paying for it out of pocket.

Viewing 70 - 72 of 1,868 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,117 General Dynamics Mission Systems reviews submitted anonymously by General Dynamics Mission Systems employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if General Dynamics Mission Systems is right for you.