Xerox reviews

3.3

45% would recommend to a friend

(9,135 total reviews)
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Louie Pastor

86% approve of CEO

32% positive business outlook

Xerox has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 9,135 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Xerox employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

9K reviews
1.0
Jul 31, 2014

Once a great company, but no longer

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Xerox used to have a great internal structure that had sales people in sales roles and staff-type people in staff-type roles. Makes sense, right? They blew up their "principal" line of business in the summer of 2012 and things have spiraled downward internally ever since. Basically, anyone that had a pulse was turned into a salesperson whether they wanted to or not or had the proper skills to be successful. Several talented people have since left as the company continues to tout its "churn 'n burn" mantra (not figuratively, but literally... they want to squeeze people dry for a few years and then hire someone younger at a significantly lower salary.) The pros to working at Xerox now? You'll learn a lot about Managed Print Services, which has become a commodity instead of a valued service, but Xerox continues to be the perennial worldwide leader according to all 4 industry analysts. Honestly, I cannot think of a single other "pro," and I'm really trying to be fair here.

Cons

At the risk of sounding like a disgruntled employee, I'll simply encourage you to Google Ursula Burns. You'll find that the top search is "worst CEO" and she is, in fact, the perennial worst (or on the top 5 list... WORLDWIDE). The board is afraid to fire her (I won't mention why, but it's fairly easy to figure out), and she seems to have adopted Mark Hurd's old "lay people off to meet Wall St. expectations" philosophy whilst giving herself 7-figure bonuses each year. If you want to know more, read on.... Add to Ursula Xerox's "rebrand-the-old-to-make-it-new" strategy (they took Lexmark's "Print, Move, Manage" from 10+ years ago and call it NextGen MPS) and shockingly poor integration of its 2010 acquisition of Affiliated Computer Services, and you have an old American company with a LOT of potential that is, unfortunately, forever stuck in its old ways. And, unless you are of the personality type that loves to drink the Korporate Kool Aid, Xerox is not the place for you. If you don't buy into their NextGen shtick and their not-so-unique assessment team, Newfield IT, you won't fit it in and will be pushed out. Oh, and let's not even go down the path of senior-level sales positions turning into telemarketing positions that require time-intensive Salesforce.com focus and micromanagement the likes you've never experienced anyplace else. And then there's their back-end system, ValueQuix, which is 1980s technology used for ordering and delivery and works AGAINST employees trying to execute sales. And then there is the constant territory coverage wars between Xerox "direct," their "agent" accounts, and their Global Imaging (GIS) accounts... Xerox's largest competitor in many accounts is - and I'm not making this up - itself. I'll shut up now, but ask yourself: do I want to work for a company whose CEO is on multiple "worst CEO" lists year after year? Because stuff rolls downhill...

1.0
Jul 28, 2014

Unsustainable management model

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Xerox was once a great place to work, but no longer.

Cons

Xerox has consistently gone downhill over the last 10 years. Five years ago it was due to the economy and print market, but more recently it is the management model. The much touted $7B investment in ACS was supposed to bring tremendous growth for Xerox, but just last quarter the management admitted that the Xerox Services business is not working and they are working on “Services 2.0” to make it a sustainable and profitable business. So, we paid $7B for an unsustainable business? Every firm needs to run as lean as possible and continually look for ways to be more efficient, but Xerox is ultra-focused on cost reduction and is ignoring investments to grow the business by better meeting customer needs. The frequency of layoffs at Xerox is so common that it doesn’t even make the news anymore. Over the last year Xerox has laid off over 5,900 employees (average of almost 1,500 per quarter). Ten years ago your career discussions with your manager were about preparing you for the next promotion. Today those conversations are about the best group to work in to avoid the next layoff. Xerox is losing customers left and right due to the continual cuts in engineering, service, sales, and supply chain. Managers spend so much time dealing with irate customers that they don't have time to be proactive about improving the customer satisfaction of those who were not about to throw us out the door. The recent highly visible firing of Xerox by the state of Nevada is a sign of Xerox focusing on internal processes and ignoring the customer needs. It makes me sad to see what Xerox has come to. When I started with Xerox 20 years ago there was passion, pride, and excitement about working at Xerox. That’s long gone. If you walk in to a Xerox office today you will see rows of empty cubes, and employees that are completely demoralized.

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