IBM reviews

3.9

78% would recommend to a friend

(107,070 total reviews)
avatar

Arvind Krishna

76% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

IBM has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 107,070 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The IBM 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

107K reviews
5.0
Oct 31, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The working culture and environment is good here. Freedom to employees and facility of work from home.

Cons

Lagging in behind free services to employees.

1.0
Feb 27, 2013

Worst company for freshers

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

No pros. mmmmm....yes 1 pros is there: when you join the company you will get rs 25k as a bonus.

Cons

If any fresher will stay in this company for more than a year, he will ruin his/her career. No growth. First of all they will throw you at any location in India for training. Then you may get any competency on which you will be trained regardless of your skills. Training is also worst. Then after completion of training you will be assigned to a project in any location within India. You have to accept that offer otherwise you will have to leave the company. All good till this point if you accept the offer. Now when you go to the assigned location you will be on-boarded to the project. And now comes the shock. You come to know that the project which you have been assigned to has nothing to do with the competency in which you have got trained. Most of the projects in IBM GBS are support projects. Those people who love coding cannot survive here. And few projects in which there is some coding part, are assigned to non IT-Computer graduates. Now let's talk something about pay: During campus placement, package of 3.4 LPA is announced. In actual you will get only 22.5 K in hand. Combining all the benefits and variables which are part of salary structure, the total amount comes out to be 3.2 Lacs. Where did this 20 K go??? There is a bond of 1 year. 1 Lac amount. Nature of work: Many projects have shift timings. You have to work in 3 shifts. Morning, evening and night. Although you will get extra allowances per shift. No work life balance. There will be no team outings, lunch, or fun. Much more negative points are there which I' am not remembering.. :P To sum up, this company is for those people who are about to retire, and do not want to work, just sit..

2.0
Jul 30, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I was a developer at IBM in Tivoli for a little over two years and started fresh out of school. Generally, starting salaries (fresh out of college) are fairly competitive. Mostly all of my co-workers were very professional and cordial. Given the size of the company you have an opportunity to move around if you really network well; however, this is getting harder and harder to pull off. Also if you want to work from home there are plenty of opportunities in development, test, project management, IT, etc. that will allow you to do it either full or part-time. Also flex-time was truly flexible; many a time I ran long mid-day errands without anyone raising an eyebrow (rating system is "results" oriented, I'll get to this later). There are some really interesting projects mainly in the Software Group Strategy, Rational, and Lotus pillars if you are good enough to maneuver yourself onto one of those teams. Health Benefits were quite basic for a big company. You get a standard 80/20 with about a $700 deductible for free and you payed about $75 a month for each additional dependant. They had other options that weren't bad but they got expensive quick; however, after the sixth child it's free! You also can get a lot of discounts such as 25% off cell phone service and employee pricing on GM cars. Vacation was 3 weeks plus 4 - 5 floating holidays per year which effectively meant you got 4 weeks of vacation not including U.S. national holidays out of the gate which is pretty good. Also the 401(k) match was not to shabby at 6% dollar for dollar.

Cons

Some people joke about executives only caring about the stock price and running their company only worrying about the quarter to quarter results, IBM does it. This quarter to quarter madness is quite understandable when you realize that a good chunk of the VP's incentives are in stock options. Why should they care about anything else, but the stock price? This is where they get brilliant ideas such as taking out loans to buy back company stock instead of using it to build products or buy more companies to gain market share. And this brings me to my next point. IBM is not doing very much home growing of products anymore. They tend to buy a company, add some features to the product, slowly let attrition and layoffs take its toll on the U.S. workforce while pushing the product to maintenance mode over in India, China, Argentina, or one of the other BRIC type countries. One of the products I worked on lost about half of its U.S. workforce in two years. Every time someone would leave the company or move to another product team they would not backfill them. If the natural attrition didn't work they would do a layoff and hire replacements in one of the forementioned countries. The problem with this strategy is the replacements were typically very green and knew their jobs were safe no matter what, making motivation an issue. This combined with constant benefit cuts like Tivoli free sodas/coffee being taken away (oh sorry, the email said they were aligning the drink policy with IBM guidelines) leaves the morale of the U.S. employees effectively in the toilet. One more note on the drink thing, the email they sent saying they were cutting the free drinks was dressed with the typical corporate language so they had to send up a follow-up email to clarify it. This leads me to my next point. If you want to be treated like a five year old, work here. There is nothing like working hard through a product release while the executives push/prod, make you work the weekends to keep on schedule and at the end they send one of those "YOU GUYS ROCK" emails which is supposed to motivate us even more. I remember sitting on meetings with fellow employees struggling for recognition with from the executives, it reminded me of dogs fighting for scraps from the table. The scraps being that when review time came around only one or two people would get the highest rating while the other 90% got the solid performer/average rating. And even if you did get a high rating expect maybe a 5% raise and a 7% bonus woohooo! don't spend it all one place. For the rest, better luck next year. Another problem with the rating system was how managers were the only ones with any input and they normally new the least about who was the best and did the most work. Their ignorance not being of their own fault so much as the fault of the countless meetings they were constantly stuck in all day. Oh yeah, IBMers love meetings, almost always to the detriment of productivity. The meetings were where all the power grabbing was so usually the loudest voices were listened too and respected. Meaning that if you wanted that high rating you would need to make sure your opinion heard, whether or not it was valid, so as to make sure you could check off that teaming section in your end of the year review. Now to get back to my title, this place is not the worst place on earth to work, but it far from the best. Don't let the fancy "I'm an IBMer" commercials fool you into thinking it is as hip and progressive as Google or Apple. If you are a go-getter self-starter type you would probably do better working at a start-up or a small company where you can really have an impact. I remember reading in college about all these famous inventions by IBM and its alumni and startups such as Craigslist started by former IBMers, and for some reason I missed the former part. Yeah, IBM gets a lot of great people, but many of the truly successful ones in the industry are the ones that leave. If not you could end up like some of my former co-workers in their late 20's early 30's who talk about big dreams outside of the company but get comfortable and never go anywhere. Getting comfortable at IBM is easy to do, but that is the biggest mistake you can make there. With the constant layoffs, make sure to keep an exit plan open so when you leave it is for the betterment of your career, like my case, rather than your group missed its quarterly number by a quarter percent and you get hit by the next "resource action" or "restructuring" (a.k.a. layoff). So bottom line: feel free to by stock in IBM, just don't work there.

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