Microsoft reviews

4.0

77% would recommend to a friend

(53,884 total reviews)
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Satya Nadella

77% approve of CEO

71% positive business outlook

Microsoft has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 53,884 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Microsoft employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

54K reviews
3.0
Oct 12, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Bleeding edge technology. If you happen to land in the right right spot, it's really fun to work on a new API or library that other developers will use. Health care coverage - up through 2013. After that it's going to be much more expensive.

Cons

I started working at MSFT at the end of the "gold rush" - mid '90s. At that time if you worked there say 7 to 10 years you were rich and you were retiring - gone to the French Riveria or someplace. With MSFT stock still less than 50% what it was 11 years ago, everyone now must work longer - years longer. The company thrives on new college hires. Fresh, bright, eager, talented 20 somethings from the top CS programs in the world. They come in ready to continue a 60 to 80 hr work week that's much like the quarter system at the university. Lots of papers, projects, mid-terms and finals. Here they are called milestones. Finals are called reviews. As long as you can maintain this continual "grad school death march" you are fine. Once you've put on a few years and pass 40 years old. This pace starts to take a toll on you. In fact, you don't really see too many employees here past the age of 40. You rarely see a person over 50. There's a ladder system of levels and an upward slope. As long as you can maintain a good pace and advance climbing the ladder at a reasonable speed you're fine. There comes a time when you pass 40 years old that you reach your personal maximum level. The company career process is not equipped to deal with that. If you "level out" on your climb and it looks like you won't reach the next rung on the ladder, then you start being treated like dead wood. There's no place for a jouneyman engineer at MSFT. They only respect and understand the early stages of an employees life from 20 something to retirement age. This company is not a safe place to work for older employees.

1.0
Apr 26, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great health benefits, lots of capital to invest in long-term projects, many smart people who are great to work with.

Cons

The bell-curve approach to assigning review scores that Microsoft uses is designed to promote competition. In reality though, especially on a team of top-performers, the folks on the left side of the curve end up feeling more dis-couraged than en-couraged to compete. Creating a competitive culture where employees must stand out relative to their peers can negatively impact teamwork & cooperation as well since those seeking a good review will spend extra effort trying to get noticed for *their* contributions. This flies in the face of advice given by renouned leadership gurus Dale Carnegie & Stephen Covey--ironically, training/books that Microsoft provides to its employees. Another downside I've noticed is that the company places a very high value on raw intelligence but a lot less value on leadership, management ability and human relations. Perhaps less so now than in the past, but still Microsoft has many managers who were previously programmers who ended up in management due more to their seniority than their suitability as managers/leaders. If you work for one of these managers, your career can suffer, especially if there are better managers whose employees are getting better career advice/support/internal PR, etc. within the group you're measured against.

2.0
Feb 15, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* Great Benefits: Still offer all medical and dental without co pays or contributions * Very technology savvy company with lots of free software * Ability to buy company software for family and friends at great discounts * Lots of information to share (if you know where to find it) * Lots of employee surveying each year: Survey results for managers are chance to give direct feedback and results are an important part of leadership success; those with bad scores are put on notice * Great amount of work has gone into career ladders and helping employees and managers understanding what the attributes of success and areas of opportunity are at most levels in job families * Beautiful Redmond campus with many great new buildings. Great commuter alternatives, free bus system and ways to get around the increasingly large campus

Cons

* Without a doubt, the most critical work environment I have ever worked. Very few "attaboys". If 95% is working and 5% needs improvement, the focus is on the 5% * Never worked in a place where people are as fungible as here. It's burn em and churn em at it's worst * Very little appreciation for all the hard work that employees put out. In the end, you're just a cog in a wheel *Most email-centric culture I ever worked in. Everyone emails everyone all the time and copies half the world. On many occasions, I would see an email trail that could have been stopped 3 days ago if the two principals to the issue has just bothered to have a 3 minute conversation. People sitting literally next door to each other will email one another rather than talk to each other! * Very self service environment. Very little administrative support except at the highest levels (GM and above). Everyone else is on their own. Be prepared to make your own calendar invites and copies and travel arrangements by yourself......frequently * Career ladder and job family information doesn't mean enough. Too often, promotions and career advancement are based on good old fashioned politics and who do you know. * Work/life balance is a crock. More like work/life blend! And in the end, your family pays. Even when you are home, you're often not available because you're expected to be on email at night. Especially true if your job has any global scope. Then expect doing emails from home until 11 pm and then when you get up at 6 am, there are 30-40 emails from other parts of the world that will need your attention (because of course, once the email has been sent, the monkey is off the senders back and on yours even if you haven't had the time to address the issues. * Too many meeting and not enough time to get work done (except at night and on weekends) * Still too much reliance on stock as part of compensation package without the realization that the stock hasn't performed well for about 10 years. This comes from the top (Steve Ballmer) who hasn't owned up to the fact that incentive targets are out of whack with the market (except at GM level and above at which point, you are golden). Need to up the incentive targets at levels close to Director. *Company made a big mistake having first ever layoffs at time of still huge multi-billion dollar profits per quarter. Sent a clear message that people don't matter and this will come back to haunt them when the hiring market improves.

Viewing 379 - 381 of 53,884 Reviews

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