Arm reviews

4.5

89% would recommend to a friend

(2,630 total reviews)
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Rene Haas

93% approve of CEO

88% positive business outlook

Arm has an employee rating of 4.5 out of 5 stars, based on 2,630 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Arm 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

3K reviews
1.0
Aug 19, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Passionate individuals - Great work life balance - One of the best ways of gaining experience while at University

Cons

If you are in the same shoes as I was a few months ago, trying to decide if Arm is a good place for you to start your career, then please believe me, avoid Arm at all costs. Although I cannot deny that I met wonderful people and gained invaluable experience, Arm absolutely threw me under the bus, broke their promises, and "rescinded" my graduate contract of employment 6 months after it was signed. Following a successful summer, I was offered a position in their graduate program in January. At the time, I was interviewing for a few different jobs, however I was convinced by the people at Arm to pause these in favour of joining them instead. As a result, I signed my contract of employment with Arm and thought that was the end of it. Unfortunately, in April, out of the blue, I was contacted via my mobile by Arm and was informed that they would be "rescinding" my signed and countersigned contract of employment due to their on-going redundancy lay-offs. This was a shock to me as I was unsure (and still am) as to how a company can rescind a signed contract. More importantly, I had been promised by several in-the-know individuals that Graduate offer holders would not be affected by Arm's redundancy lay offs. This phone call left me with many questions, however I was told to "shortly" expect an email that would clarify things. This email never came, and I instead was left in the dark for 2 months. In contrast, other Arm employees affected by the redundancy lay offs were given counselling to support them through the process and representation at the senior level to defend their position. I was given none of that. When that discrepancy was raised, no action was taken. It was only in June, 2 weeks away form my graduation, that I finally heard back from H.R.. They informed me that they didn't intend on offering me any compensation for "rescinding" my signed contract of employment. Words cannot even begin to express my frustration. In a redundancy lay off that was very clearly planned as away to cut cost in order to obtain a higher valuation at the upcoming IPO, it is disgusting that the company went as far as to target Early Careers individuals who do not have the experience or support network to fall back onto. For a company whose value is "We not I", this feels very much like a greedy I. I was finally laid off at the end of June, a whole 3 months after I was first communicated that Arm intended on "rescinding" my contract. The unbelievably slow pace of this process has concluded at a time of the year where companies are no longer recruiting for graduate programmes, and I will now struggle to find anything until the January graduate intake.

1.0
Aug 17, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Large empty Cambridge office, new and mostly unused.

Cons

Skilled engineering staff leaving in droves, unrealistic and undeliverable roadmap, all focus on IPO, junior staff not being developed, workload ever increasing. Current hard push to force people to return to office. Bonuses have dried up and engineers seem to be waiting for their IPO payout before leaving. Sad to see the culture go, DEI is non existant and the mangement team do not care.

3.0
Jun 28, 2022

Well placed company, does not care about you if your not an engineer

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

> Strong Business Outlook. Well-positioned in the marketplace from legacy products. Good products and headwinds for the future should mean Arm is successful > People are smart and generally very nice / generally want to add value. > Pay is average given inflation. Bonuses make it worthwhile. Opportunity for L&D which is nice. > If you are an engineer Arm will treat you very well.

Cons

> If you are not in engineering, don't bother, no one cares what you think. Why should leaders care, even if your contribution is valid? You don't develop products after all. You are essentially viewed as just dead weight. You will be paid less year on year and treated like a second-class citizen compared to engineering. > Politics is rife as people jive to keep their jobs and gain 'favour' to be seen to be delivering, even if really they are not. > Good luck getting ideas to percolate up within the business. This is a top-down business where the leadership style is to ask for your opinion but your opinion isn't what is important, the important thing is you come to the same conclusion as the predefined plan of leadership. Anything else is discarded, discarded or ignored, resulting in many 'yes men'. This is dangerous for the longevity of the business if it is to be a multigenerational business. Arm will probably be fine anyway for the next decade though because of its market position.

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