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National Instruments

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National Instruments reviews

3.7

68% would recommend to a friend

(571 total reviews)

Alex Davern

62% approve of CEO

46% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

571 reviews

Reviews about "Culture"

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2.0
Dec 22, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Other tech writers are generally affable. There is a wonderful on-site doctor's clinic. Dr. Truchard is a nice guy. National Instruments hires new grads, when almost every other company is unwilling to.

Cons

Being a technical writer at Initech, er, National Instruments is about the most paper-pushing, clerical, bureaucratic job you can find. Almost nothing I enjoy about technical writing is present in my job. Like being a user advocate? Too bad, because a team of engineers already decided how they want the documentation, and you have no influence. Like to write? Well, you won’t be doing much of that, thanks to arcane in-house tools and processes that devour most of your time. Like clear communication? A technical writer’s job at NI is not well defined, so someone can come to you at the last minute to tell you you haven’t done something no one told you was part of your job. Like feeling valued? Hardly anyone thanks you, even when you’ve put in extra hours fixing someone else’s mistakes. The internal processes are obese and inflexible, and you’ll spend a lot more time making sure things are done according to a process than actually solving a problem. A small issue becomes emailing a committee, then that committee emails another committee, and “have you done the steps yet because the committee can’t do anything until you do all the steps, whoops, someone forgot a step, hold everything, let’s form another committee.” I’ll grant that the work-life balance is usually good, but what do you expect when salaries are about 15% below average? National Instruments is squeezing as much work as they possibly can out of their employees, and paying them as little as they can without resistance. Hmm, I wonder why the workforce is predominately new grads? National Instruments says it is a vision-driven company. Ok then, why would they build a manufacturing plant in Austin and then lay off all the plant workers? Where is the vision there? Why is ni.com an information architecture nightmare? Why doesn't anybody know what other groups are doing? Each group is solving the same problems for itself, duplicating their efforts over and over and over. If it’s a vision-driven company, then there are gaping holes in the vision. Also, vacation is the worst of any place I’ve ever worked. You accrue vacation as the year goes on, but you can only carry over 20 hours of vacation to the next year (they JUST raised it up from zero hours). So if you want to take a vacation early on in the year, you have to get approval from multiple managers, go negative on your vacation balance, and then accrue that time back before you can go on vacation again.

4.0
Dec 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Hands down the culture. It's a creative environment where you truly believe you're making a difference in the world.

Cons

While the pay is fair, you're not going to get rich. All leadership are engineers.

3.0
Dec 15, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

* Established, stable company * Lots of smart people * Customers do amazing things with NI products * Learn basics of software development NI was a great place to start a career. I learned a ton and worked with very smart coworkers.

Cons

NI was once a fast growth tech company with lots of innovation and excitement. Now it has matured and hit a plateau, becoming a medium sized company where it's hard to be more than a cog in the machine. A handful of senior technical people are the gatekeepers to what and how things are done. Those ways are not usually industry standard or industry leading, but somewhat home-grown, "we do things differently because we are different from other software development companies", and so you will not get exposed to better concepts because these senior tech gatekeepers will disallow them. Also, the range of technologies you will work on is narrow: primarily desktop software, not web or mobile. Without having been at NI for ten to twenty years, you will not get to become one of these gatekeepers. NI has long prized hiring from college, promoting from within, and even people who have been at the company five years are considered relatively new. This is a strength and a weakness. There ends up being an in-bred tunnel vision on improving things because everyone at NI thinks they are an exception to the rule that is proven to work in the industry.

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