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National Instruments

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National Instruments reviews

3.7

68% would recommend to a friend

(377 total reviews)

Alex Davern

62% approve of CEO

46% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

377 reviews

Reviews about "Management"

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3.0
Jun 8, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I went the AE-PSE path that technical new hires usually take. I did well in both, won some awards and ended up staff level before I took off. I chose NI out of college for a few reasons I think are still valid: 1) Austin is a fun place to be the first years out of college. This isn't related to career at all but I think it provides a good way to come out of your engineering shell and establish a work life balance by finding people and things you like and can engage in while driving a career. No one should be the 35yo engineering stereotype. 2) The exposure to different engineering disciplines and companies in AE is unmatched by anything but a marketing or sales role. 3) NI technology is valuable and innovative. Some reasons I think I over-weighted are: 1)Stability. If you can get into NI, you have other options anyway, but you will have to try to get fired. While this acts like insurance while you get your feet under you to be industry competitive, you just don't need it. 2) Great place to work. Form your own opinion on this. No statistic will ever say what culture you personally will enjoy. 3) ELP. ELP is a "marketing construct" (the guy who started the program's words, not mine), not a job reality.

Cons

I left the company after three years for a few different reasons: 1) Management overhead. It is ridiculous how many managers there are in R&D and how poorly they function at developing talent. 2) Inability to take risks to provide opportunities, on both an individual and product level. 3) Lack of performance on an individual and product level. This has officially been recognized within NI as critical issue causing growth problems. My opinion is that it is heavily tied into the first two issues To a new hire I think the bottom line is that this is a learning opportunity, not a career company.

5.0
Jun 2, 2014

Great engineering culture

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

NI has a lot of really bright engineers that make the work fun. Management really cares about the employees. The culture is great. The CEO is great! Dr. T is a great technical leader.

Cons

Not sure. I suppose that the company could do with taking more risks. I would like to see them do something off the wall, like Apple did with the first iPhone.

2.0
May 22, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Starting salary was better than I expected. I was offered about the average of what a mechanical engineer at my university made coming out of school, which is really good considering many of my peers went to work in the oil and gas industry where salaries are very high. The Applications Engineering department was a very fun place to work when I was there (2008-2010) - my peers were mostly high performers and young so we had lots of fun. My first sales manager was the best manager I've ever had. NI also makes some awesome products.

Cons

AE management is a joke. Your "manager" is someone as tenured as you, which means they are about 24 years old and are supposed to be in charge of your career development despite the fact they haven't developed their own career yet. NI stands for "no income". Salary is nowhere near competitive over time. The worse part about this is management and HR know this and continue to spew corporate crap about how it's in line with the rest of the measurement/automation industry and our "whole package" is great. The problem is, even the "whole package" isn't great. The health benefits have been decimated and aren't as good as they are with my new company. I doubled my income when I left NI! NI talks a lot about corporate culture and how it's a great place to work, and 10 years ago it was probably the best place to work in Austin. However, Austin has exploded in the last few years with silicon valley giants like Google, Apple, Facebook and Evernote moving into town. Austin has become "Silicon Hills", and there are a lot of great places to work in Austin now. The culture at other companies in town is as good or better than NI, so many talented NI people have realized that they can make more money and not sacrifice culture and still work in Austin. The best people are leaving in droves. Although there are still many top performers at NI, there are a lot of average and low performing people still there because they don't have anywhere else to go. NI is a great place to work - if you are an average or low performing person. It sucks if you're a high performer and want to be rewarded for your merits.

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