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National Instruments

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National Instruments Hardware Design Engineer reviews

3.2

26% would recommend to a friend

(19 total reviews)

Alex Davern

Not enough data to show CEO approval

1% positive business outlook

Hardware Design Engineer employees have rated National Instruments with 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 19 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Hardware Design Engineer professionals have a good working experience there. National Instruments is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Hardware Design Engineer professionals compared to other employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

19 reviews
2.0
Oct 19, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There is a large variety of different products made by national instruments which can give you the opportunity to learn about a wide array of technologies. Since the average age of the employees at the company is pretty low you can have the opportunity to get very involved in projects early in your career if you have the motivation to go after these opportunities. There are a handful of very knowledgeable technical people there who are great sources to help get you going if you can find them. The working environment is casual and for the most part the company is pretty forgiving about honest mistakes.

Cons

The management at NI is the single greatest downside of the company. The company recruits heavily for a position known as AE (application engineering) which puts people in a program known as ELP (engineering leadership program). These people are basically expected to do the technical support for 1-3 years and then have to move on to another area of the company. A lot of times this ends up being Sales or Marketing but you also get a fair amount working in R&D. Most of the R&D management came through this path at some point and while they are not bad people they really don't have the technical or managerial experience to be in this kind of management role. This leads to a lot of frustration for the technical folks. Overall it seems like the company never figured out how to deal with the fact it had grown so much so fast and now is just floundering around trying to make the old formula fit the current situation.

4.0
Aug 4, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great place to start a career, but you have to move on. I can't imagine staying with the company long term. The company seems to attract some of the best and brightest. It's great to have such intelligent, creative and committed coworkers.

Cons

Salaries tend to be on the low side compared to other companies. It's tough to retain the best and brightest employees when you aren't paying them as much as their peers who work elsewhere.

2.0
Jun 30, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Many hires are fresh from college; if you are one of them (like I was) then you will have many colleagues that are in the same boat as you (new to the Austin area, not yet entrenched in family life, looking to have fun outside of work). New grads are given a great deal of responsibility considering their limited work experience. No dress code and flexible work hours.

Cons

After a couple of years you will have learned most of what there is to learn about data acquisition hardware design (I was a hardware engineer there). Being underpaid and underappreciated it is time to move on at that point. Although senior management has their act together, the mid-level managers that I dealt with were generally not very competent. Mid-level managers promoted a culture of finger pointing, blame deflection, and kissing up ahead of teamwork. This type of culture can be toxic for a technology company, which is proven by the company's financial and stock performance the last several years. The company touted the fact that it could/should grow 20-40% a year; that hasn't come close to happening since I began working there in 2001, and probably will never happen if its culture doesn't change. Unless if you are fresh out of college I think that you would better serve your career by working somewhere else.

Viewing 16 - 18 of 19 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,927 National Instruments reviews submitted anonymously by National Instruments employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if National Instruments is right for you.