Apple reviews

4.1

79% would recommend to a friend

(42,986 total reviews)
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Tim Cook

86% approve of CEO

72% positive business outlook

Apple has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 42,986 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Apple employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informationstechnologie industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

43K reviews
1.0
Mar 20, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Cool products, high expectations and smart coworkers.

Cons

I've worked collectively at Apple for over 14 years. When I first started working at Apple, Inc. the group I was in was highly collaborative with many growth opportunities. The group I was with was a complete nightmare. These are the top issues. 1. Severe harassment of employees that was encouraged by upper management. Apple is not a diverse and inclusive place. My manager, who was a female, believed that women who had children should not be allowed to work at Apple. She complained to women in my group and to management that "breeders" destroyed the culture at Apple. She told me that she will only hire young men and she has held to that promise, she hired three young men. She said she would never hire another breeding female. Her behavior is known by HR and management and encouraged. When my coworker had to drive her sick kid to the doctor she was furious, she said when she was a kid she rode her bike to the doctor and she didn't understand why we had to drive our kids to the doctor. When I was out for two days with the influenza A virus (only two days were missed) she required that I send a positive test result (which I did because I didn't realize it was illegal) to get the two days of sick time approved. My manager also spoke out against larger size people in public spaces. Calling people, including me fat and saying fat people are lazy and shouldn't work at Apple. After working almost 10 consecutive weeks without a break I ended up in the ER with a heart arrhythmia. I was told by my manager that people with my heart condition should not be allowed to work at Apple and that I should leave. I only missed one WEEKEND of work because I was in the ER. My manager also had a policy that if we were sick we had to publicly email everyone about our sick leave and the nature of the illness. Talk about embarrassing. Thankfully HR did stop her from doing this. Also my manager and Apple in general is strongly agist. I've been a part of interviews where hiring managers would pass by older (in 40s) candidates based solely on age. There were also snide comments and decisions made about clothing choices (too nicely dressed) of people interviewing. Myself and many others were repeatedly called stupid, it was humiliating. I have 13 years of engineering with graduate degree. If she found your work to not be of value, you were called stupid and publicly and privately humiliated. One of my coworkers use to go to her car at lunch every day and cry. They eventually drove her out and forced her to retire. 2. Speaking out is strongly discouraged and if you're brave enough to speak up about the toxic culture your career at Apple will be destroyed, even if you have HR involvement. HR promised me there would be no retribution for speaking up, they lied. My breaking point is when my manager threatened to fire me because I wouldn't give up the name of the person who heard her talking about me and others as being fat. After years of harassment I went to HR for help. After an extensive HR investigation nothing was done, at least nothing I could see from my end. Her treatment of me and my team members got worse. Her reputation of being a lethal bully transcended our group and organization. Her own husband admitted to my friend she would be a nightmare to work for. The end result of the HR investigation was my career at Apple, with the help of HR, being destroyed. Speaking up has destroyed many people within the organization. 3. Promoting people to management position that have no idea how to manage or even interact with other humans. Just because someone is a good engineer doesn't mean they can be a good leader. 4. No opportunity for growth or even transfer within in Apple. There are some organizations, mine was like this, they took complete offense if you asked to transfer. I wanted to learn how to automate, learn new skills and take on more responsibility. I was told that I was to stick to what I was doing and I would be nothing more than that. When I first asked for support to transfer I was told I was not allowed to transfer. When I interviewed with other groups, who were very excited to have me working with them, I was blocked by my manager. If you want to grow or transfer, it will not happen. 5. Women are payed significantly less than the male coworker doing the same work. For example I had almost 14 years of experience at Apple, had managed and had multiple degrees. A male new hire who was new to this kind of engineering work (recent grad) was paid $25k more than I was making. My other male coworkers (who had much less experience) made significantly more than I and the other women did. 6. Apple will work you to death, literally, with no remorse. People are fodder for the engine that makes Apple billions. The working hours are brutal. Families are destroyed. Employees burn out, have breakdowns, health issues, some have even committed suicide (shot himself in the head in a meeting room). This is true for every group I've worked at Apple. There were many nights of sleeping under the desk, when you get a chance. I once had 10 weeks in a row with no weekend break. There was one week that I never got to see my kids at all. When the weather became horrible in California I was trapped by roads that had washed out. I was told to leave my children at home (alone) and get a hotel (which cost more per day than I made) next to work. Because I refused to leave my kids at home for the 2 days I missed, I was called out in my review for not getting a hotel. Can you imagine? The stuff that happened in China and Apple was not surprising given how they treat their US employees.

1.0
Jun 5, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It is nice to be around so may really bright people and I did pretty well financially with my stock options/employee stock purchase plan.

Cons

As a female engineer, it was impossible for me to develop or even stay up to date. There were "some" really great guys who treated me as an equal from the first moment. However, there were too many others who excluded me, talked down to me, and discounted or ignored what I had to say. I was shut out from the projects and information that I needed to stay up to day or develop as an engineer. I did everything in my power to try to get around this, and was still shut out. They have a diversity program, but are very naive about what is really going on. I also got the distinct impression that the software engineers would never get the same respect and status as the hardware engineers. In addition, certain people, would obstruct teamwork and information sharing presumably to preserve their job security. The last thing that really bothered me was that certain teams were required to work seven days a week for 2 or 3 months straight, in order to get a product out.

1.0
Apr 18, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Decent pay and bonus, but not competitive with the market when breaking it down by the hour -cool campus, - you will learn a lot, although it is not worth the sacrifices you will make

Cons

Apple is undoubtedly one of the most innovative companies on the tech hardware market today, but what people don’t realize is what employees of Apple sacrifice in order to obtain this innovation for the company. While many departments within Apple have a good work life balance and receive compliments from management, the supply chain and purchasing department of Apple is the complete opposite. Supply chain is one of Apple’s largest competitive advantages, and you will feel the pain and burden of that every moment of every day. The Global Supply Manager role is incredibly demanding. My day would typically start at 9:00 AM, and end around 11:00 PM, and there were multiple times that I would have calls at 2:30 AM. My management knew my hours and my stress, and instead of helping lighten the workload, they told me to, “stay optimistic”, and then several weeks later they doubled my scope of responsibilities. You will have colleagues texting you and calling you at 11:00 PM on weekdays and weekends. The only way to escape this invasive behavior is to place your phone on airplane mode, although you will get in trouble for this when you fail to answer a single text or phone call. There are not enough hours in the day to get everything done, even if you are a Type A person who is extremely organized and productive. I should clarify that the hours are not the worst part of the job, instead, it is your colleagues who are just as nervous, tired, stressed, and angry at everything as you are. Apple encourages a very hostile environment, both internally and externally, where Global Supply Managers are encouraged to have extremely aggressive discussions with suppliers and individuals from other departments. There is no problem at Apple that cannot be solved by yelling and using condescending language. I have seen Apple employees yell at people earning a tenth of what they earn half way across the globe for problems that individual had no way of controlling. I’ve been in procurement for some time, and I have never seen people treated in such an undignified way as Apple supply chain professionals treat their suppliers and colleagues. There is no balance in work life. If you have children or a spouse, then those relationships must be de-prioritized in place of Apple. At the end of the day, Apple will chew you up and spit you out, because no matter how loudly you voice that the expectations are not sustainable, they know that there are 30 more applicants fresh out of college who will take your place and be willing to do so for less pay. These fresh faces will then last one or two years, only to then be replaced. It is an endless cycle, and this is nothing new for Apple. Perspective employee beware. When applying for Apple, I remember reading negative reviews such as this one, and quickly disregarding them because I labeled those reviews as “overly-dramatic”, but after two weeks at Apple, I realized how true the other cautionary reviews on this website were.

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