IBM reviews

3.9

78% would recommend to a friend

(107,112 total reviews)
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Arvind Krishna

76% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

IBM has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 107,112 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
1.0
Nov 30, 2011

Good for resume; bad for blood pressure

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Looks fantastic on a resume. - Pay is sufficient for survival. - Benefits outside of salary are decent. I appreciate the health, vision, and dental plans and the fact that they match up to a certain percentage that you pay into your own 401(k).

Cons

- Overtime is expected. Constantly. We are told, "It all evens out eventually," but no amount of comp time makes up for the amount of hours I work. I'm pretty sure now that they don't care if we burn out within a few years; there's always someone cheaper who will take our place, in their minds. I haven't worked <60-hour week for the past two years...and I've only been here for three. - I'm definitely not getting paid enough to work the hours that I do. - Management at the highest levels are absolutely not aware of the demands being placed on those actually doing the work that they require. Because someone at the top said, "jump," everybody asks, "How high?" for fear of making the wrong person angry. - On the same note, requirements for projects grow, while company resources go down. There simply aren't enough people to complete the work that we have piled upon us in any sort of satisfactory way. We were told earlier this year that we should figure out ways to "do less with less"...so why aren't we actually doing less? - There is too much of a focus on quantity and not quality. Why aren't we selling as much? Because the work we do is shoddy at best. Because of the insane requirements heaped upon us at the beginning of a release, designs aren't thought through, and subpar products are released as a result. - Those that speak loudest get the most rewards, even if their ideas go nowhere. I've seen people advance to the highest pay and responsibility band despite having little to nothing to show for it. Meanwhile, the employees that actually provide value are left behind. Eventually, they leave, while the loudest speakers remain and continue to drive the company further into the ground. - I feel as though I was sold a lie when I signed on to the company. I was told that I could do anything I want; that I can create a career here; that the sky is the only limit. However, despite expressing a desire to seek other avenues or more creative ways of doing my job, I am pigeonholed into the same position repeatedly, with more responsibility for my current position being piled on. There is no time to develop other skills, and what used to be a skill quickly becomes stagnant. I absolutely do not feel free to pursue other paths, because I am constantly told, "You are needed more here. If you don't like it, you can leave." - Too much of a focus on being physically present. If I want to work from home, I should have that option, particularly when I have demonstrated that I can be trusted to actually produce good results while still working from home. The "back to the lab" initiative makes no sense - to be told that we must be present to be remembered makes absolutely no sense when most of the development teams are scattered all over the world. Most of my team isn't local, but they still know me and trust me. But apparently a few rotten apples that have abused the system while producing terrible work have ruined it for everyone. Because they worked from home too often, everyone else has to suffer. - On the same note, zero work-life balance. They've stopped calling it that now - it's now "work-life integration." To me, that just says, "We expect you to work more than we want you to have a life outside of the company."

2.0
Oct 5, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Relatively stable employment - Competitive benefits package - Reasonable work/life balance encouraged and applied - Sufficient opportunity for lateral movement within the organization

Cons

- Virtually no possibility for advancement - Nepotism common - Compensation is below industry average - Senior management often has fundamental lack of respect for employees - Employee turnover high

2.0
Sep 13, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some opportunity to move around and gain experience in other areas, Good training opportunities. Some good people to work with

Cons

Where do I begin, I have 10 reports, in the last 4 years each has had one wage rise of less than 1 percent, some more junior staff are struggling financially. Staff ratings are frankly inequitable and driven by quotas, and microscopic budgets. While IBM has great diversity & equality guidelines, in practice they are utterly ignored and people spend considerable effort finding creative ways to bypass them. People who work to bypass IBM's gargantuan, unwieldy bureaucracy, to aid the client are p15sed on. We had some guys that reduced the time to completion for projects from 6 months to 2 weeks. The customer was deliriously happy. The guys that did this, put in 100 hours a week for 6 months, were rewarded with a cinema ticket. No wage rise and a poor PBC rating (personnel rating). People who are good at their jobs are surreptitiously blocked from moving accounts. There is a list of staff that are considered essential to the account. No-one will admit to the existence of this list. If someone from this list attempts to move from the account, the manager trying to get the resource , is told, you don't want them, he, she is a trouble maker. This extends to people who apply for work with a customer. This is the tip of the iceberg in terms of sleaze. Up until an account is signed nothing is too good for the customer, however once they are on board, resources are bled from the account till its barely operational, this continues until the customer complains, or its time to renew the account, when the circus begins again. There is zero budget for tools. Any automation is cobbled together by a variety of scripts, that are unsupportable. Collaboration tools are a spreadsheet and a mail folder. Hideous.

Viewing 187 - 189 of 107,112 Reviews

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