Chaos after Micros Acquisition - Customer Support Oracle Employee Review

3.0
Feb 20, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

After the acquisition, Oracle gave great benefits to employees, which included awesome medical benefits, 401k and an Oracle stock purchase plan. For hourly employees, they paid special differential rates for working mid-shift, evening-shifts, overnight-shifts, weekends and holidays. Customer Support employees in the Columbia, MD office were also allowed open overtime to handle the high call volume and the large backlog of open service tickets. Employees have access to searching for other jobs within Oracle including contact information for hiring managers! External applicants don't get this perk. Oracle likes to spend money on updating work facilities, computer equipment and free offer free training for employees.

Cons

Salary raises and bonuses seem almost non-existent. There were no salary increases after the acquisition of Micros; all employees were given the same salary and job title. Many promotions came with no pay increases. Oracle corporate staff did not seem to understand Micros Systems' old business practices and it's large customer base. Many of Micros' long time customers were forced to sign new contracts that were more and costly and quality of customer support was poor. Oracle hired a lot of new employees after the acquisition to work in customer support who had poor credentials and untrained for the job. Customers were largely ignored and there was a lot of chaos in how service requests were handled. Often, customers had high severity tickets that were left untouched for days, customers received no call backs nor responses and escalation requests would often go nowhere. We lost a lot of long time customers due to this.

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5.0
Jun 14, 2026
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Pros

Good work life balance for an engineer

Cons

Lots of changes in organization structure

4.0
Oct 21, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Every group/division can be different in how they treat their employees, but I'd say overall there is very good atmosphere of trust and fairness. There is a strong focus on education, and they reimburse for outside classes taken (Up to 5k/year I think). Benefits are good, and I'd say quite competitive in the market. Good 401K matching (they'll contribute a max of 3% of your 6% or greater). Free drinks in the breakroom. Flexibility to work from home at times. (If you live 50+ miles away from an office you can work full-time from home...policy).

Cons

They don't try to make the workplace anything special (maybe a pool table and arcade game are cliche or gimmicky?). In the 10 years I've worked there, they've given 2 measly %1 cost of living raises (this is the same with most everyone I've spoken to, some don't get any raises). You will not get a substantial raise ever, unless you leave then get rehired on (they will not match offers, better to leave). New employees that you train will make 10 - 20K more than you several years after you hire on (not just me, they do this to all tenured employees). They will give these untrained, less experienced people higher titles (again this is done to everyone not just me). You learn pretty quickly that you're dispensable. The company has billions in cash and they don't re-invest in their employees, just in acquiring new companies and hiring new people that know nothing that you get to train.

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