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National Instruments

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National Instruments reviews

3.7

68% would recommend to a friend

(2,459 total reviews)

Alex Davern

62% approve of CEO

46% positive business outlook

National Instruments has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 2,459 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The National Instruments employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
3.0
Dec 28, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great work/life balance. Relaxed work environment. For a new grad, NI makes it very easy to get up to speed. There is plenty of training available and you are assigned a mentor to help you along. Early in your NI career, you gain more responsibilities probably sooner than you would at other companies. Job stability is rock solid, to the point that it's practically impossible to get fired. Your work load is never unreasonable.

Cons

Prepare to be underpaid for your skill set. Pay raises usually don't even keep pace with cost of living increases. Some years, pay raises are skipped altogether. Usually, NI prefers to hire more new grads rather than give raises to existing employees. Speaking of hiring new grads, NI has grown its headcount way past what was necessary. At this point, there are too many engineers and not enough work. The company is doing well in terms of revenue but it is so bloated with unnecessary hires that the company profits are poor. Low pay tends to lead to low expectations. Poor performance is tolerated. There is not much incentive to be a "rock star" employee. Your yearly bonus is not based on individual performance but rather company metrics. Everyone gets the same bonus as a percentage of your salary. Recently, the yearly bonuses have either been zero or so small that it's embarrassing to mention it to anyone. Again, the bonus is based on company metrics which are currently poor because the company is so bloated with employees. If you are an experienced engineer, you are not paid what you're worth. The general idea is that everyone is replaceable and, thus, if you leave, you will be replaced by a new grad. Much of the projects/work are such that a new grad or relatively inexperienced engineer can complete the work. There is not much need for a "veteran" engineer for much of the work. Deadlines are usually pushed farther out to accommodate lack of experience.

3.0
Dec 22, 2014

Good resume builder for new graduates

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good work/life balance, young culture, excellent job security Great place to work if you are ok having a "comfortable" salary and care only about work/life balance and job security (aka not career-driven) lots of experience/responsibility quickly, so you build lots of good experience in a short time frame; great for resume builder fun/friendly employee culture

Cons

below average salary and benefits; raises/bonuses are typically very small (<inflation) if given at all. excessive mid-level management, many of whom are unqualified and inexperienced lots of corporate kool-aid and lip service; constantly under going some new initiative or lofty goal that quickly fizzles away and is forgotten - it gets tiring trying to keep up with it all in middle of rough transition from small, start-up style company to major corporation; growing pains upper level management always talking about record quarters, record sales, record orders; yet when it comes time for raises/bonuses "times are tough, but we will focus and next year it will be better"

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.

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