employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

National Instruments

Is this your company?

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
Sep 2, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great place to start a career right out of college. Lots of smart people around and lots to learn. From a technical point of view, you will learn more in the first two years there than you did in all of your college education. Benefits and salaries are OK, but not a place to get rich. If you are salaried, you are eligible for restricted stock units, which are actually worth something. The employee stock purchase plan is always a good deal as well -- again, don't expect to get rich, but if you put some money in, and can afford to sell on the peaks, you will do very well. Job security is great -- do your job well and you will *never* have to worry about losing your job. Dress code is casual and there is more or less an open door policy.

Cons

Management in general is VERY inexperienced. Upper, Middle and lower management is composed of application engineers. Most of these guys aren't technically competent and have zero management skills. Not their fault, and a lot of them don't have much of a choice of where to go if they want to stay, but still very detrimental to the company morale. Project managers are also (mostly) clueless application engineers, and drive many good technical people away. In practice, getting promoted is 100% up to your direct manager (as opposed to your good work). If he/she does not make a conscious effort to 'boost your image', you will never get noticed, no matter how good you are. Some very talented people have been around for almost 8 years and have not made 'senior' engineer. Because many young managers are usually way in over their heads, and too concerned with staying afloat, growing their employees is not near the top of their priorities. Recognition for releasing products is usually short lived, and in the form a 'good job' and not much else, while marketing employees regularly receive cash bonuses. The company has a growth goal of 20-40%, and that is the basis for calculating the bonus check at the end of the year. This is fine for a small company, but when your sales are almost $800M, 20% growth is *really* hard to achieve, never mind 40%. Every time there is a financial update it goes something like 'Well we only grew 13%.." or "We only grew 15%".

1.0
Aug 26, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good work/life balance, job security, great benefits.

Cons

All these pertain to IT: Very disorganized in most aspects, unclear career paths, managers play favorites, enormous amounts of pointless meetings, very slow path to getting promoted (which kills motivation), very lacking in training initiatives, discord amongst teams, too many projects get drawn out then eventually canceled. This is the wrong place for someone with an entrepreneurial spirit.

2.0
Aug 21, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you are just finishing higher education, National Instruments offers great opportunities for smart and agile young engineers ready to complement their academic knowledge with the real-world engineering experience. Whether it is technical, marketing, or sales track, if you put enough effort into your career, you will end up where you want to be. The idea of advertising the company as the best place to work for (Fortune's 100 best places to work) helps to describe the atmosphere in the company where average employee age is probably under 30. You will feel like you are on extended college education the first couple of years. Benefits are good, including stock, 401(k), medical, etc.

Cons

The above mentioned benefits are good. However, everything comes with a price. In National Instruments' case, the price is the below-average salary, and live-to-work philosophy. With the workforce primarily comprised of recent college grads, usually with no family or other responsibilities waiting for them outside working hours, those work hours have tendency to get extended. The project management staff either takes those voluntary hours as a rule, so the project schedules get created with 50-60 hour weeks in mind. As a consequence, projects perpetually get into situations where extra time is called for, and as there is always someone new around that has a desire to prove him/herself, the rest of the team (already proven engineers that have no need to repeatedly burn midnight oil to re-prove themselves) is dragged into the mayhem of effectively reducing the hourly equivalent salary to the $20s-30s range. Eventually, the word gets out, people get in touch with friends and relatives, learn of other opportunities and leave the company when they are most valuable to it - when they have learned the ways and developed the sense for what the product development should be.

Viewing 2425 - 2427 of 2,459 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,926 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.