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Lockheed Martin

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Lockheed Martin reviews

4.1

83% would recommend to a friend

(14,499 total reviews)
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James D. Taiclet

81% approve of CEO

72% positive business outlook

Lockheed Martin has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 14,499 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Lockheed Martin employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Luft- & Raumfahrt, Verteidigung industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

14K reviews
4.0
Mar 7, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There really are a lot of wonderful things about Lockheed, especially for a new hire: 1) Competitive New Hire Pay 2) Meaningful Work - in my role, I'm the sole financial analyst over contracts that can be worth anywhere from $50K to $300M. The Program Managers come to me for data, analysis, understanding and advice. 3) The End Customer - The US Gov is not fun to work for; HOWEVER working with the military and knowing how quality product reach our customer IS fun to work for 4) Benefits - 401K matching, tuition reimbursement, GREAT health/dental/vision benefits compared to most Fortune 500, rotational Leadership Development Programs, classes (including Six Sigma training) 5) Work-life Balance - You work pretty close to a 40-hour work week in most positions, business or engineering; Also, a lot of sites, including Dallas, work a 9-80 schedule, which means every other Friday is off! Believe it or not, it's even more enjoyable than it sounds. Vacation is great and the plant shuts down at Christmastime (and that doesn't take away from your vacation hours! 6) Locations - After a year in a job, it's not too difficult to move to other locations across the country if you want; and Lockheed helps pay for the move 7) Products - We make fighter jets and missile launchers. What we do is LITERALLY rocket science. It's pretty cool. I like telling people I work for real-life Stark Industries. 8) Advancement - Some might feel it comes too slow, but generally you can move up a level every 2-3 years for the first 10 years, which means a pay bump.

Cons

I've had several coworkers leave for several different reasons. Here are some cons I see and have heard from others: 1) Pay - Although the pay starts out competitive, it doesn't grow as fast as other companies. Many of my coworkers left for other companies in the area and got a 20-25% pay bump. Of course, they lose some perks, like every other Friday off, etc, but they get more dough. 2) Culture - Lockheed Martin is fairly old school. That appeals to some, but a lot of Millennials I see struggle with it. Millennials often feel leaders micro-manages too much, that advancements don't come quick enough, that they are not being recognized for all their contributions. 3) The Customer - Working for the war fighter feels awesome. Working for the war fighter through departments in the US Government is frustrating. The problem is, Lockheed Martin relies on one main customer - the USG. So what is to stop the gov from demanding what they want? Competition is tough, so LM has to give in a lot. 4) No Bonuses 5) Earned Value Management - Defense Contractors have to follow a system of measurement that is unique to defense contractors called Earned Value Management. EVM can be useful but it requires a lot of extra work on the part of the engineer and financial analyst. And it really doesn't translate to the world outside of government work. 6) Pigeon-hole - This is for financiers more so than other business areas or engineers; the type of financial work defense contractors do is pretty different than most commercial companies. If you want to move to another industry but you have been at LM a long time, you might find it hard to pitch what you have done in a way that is relatable to other companies. 7) High Level Management Doesn't Care - Honestly, this is probably true for most companies. The Missiles & Fire Control division just went through layoffs (for the first time in a long time) and honestly, it didn't seem like upper management cared too much. The packages given to those laid off were decent, but it didn't feel like management shared in our pain. The CEO also seems like she has no interest in the individual employee. When the government shut down and some contracts had to be put in stop-work, she didn't really offer a lot of support to those who had nothing to work on. They just had to wait it out.

1.0
Dec 18, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you're the kind of person that just needs job security and decent benefits in exchange for doing what you're told eight hours in a day, this is a good company for you, possibly even one of the best. If you are happy with your current skill set and do not want to work too hard to change or learn new things, you can find a comfortable cubicle at Lockheed. I've talked with others who had worked for other large corporations before working at Lockheed, and they all agree that Lockheed is better. So as far as large corporations go in general, Lockheed is not bad. Much of what I have to say about the downsides probably applies generally to this type of corporation in the context of being a software engineer.

Cons

In a nutshell: this company is not recommended to software developers who are driven, passionate, curious, and who take their craft seriously. The workforce consists of soulless clock-punching factory workers marching to the slow beat of a gigantic, impenetrable bureaucracy under the iron fist of stifling, heavyweight processes. The mental atrophy that I was exposed to during the long hours of the day at Lockheed was steadily taking its toll on me. Had I stayed there long enough, I would have become more and more apathetic and docile until my passion for software development finally died. If you are a software developer and you have a job offer from Lockheed Martin, I strongly urge you to consider what kind of a developer you are and what kind of an environment you're comfortable in. If you take pride in your work and in doing things the right way, or if you are driven to learn new things, think twice before accepting that offer. If you actually enjoy coding and you do it for free in your spare time, you will find yourself alone at Lockheed. If you like to have a choice in the tools, languages, frameworks, or platforms that you use to do your work, or if you even have any strong opinion whatsoever about these things, do not sign that offer letter. One of the most disappointing things about my time at Lockheed was the fact that there was no one I could look up to as a software developer. Until that time I had always had people to look up to; people who were better than me and repeatedly proved it. It's important to have that, because then you have an incentive to push yourself and a vision of what you can be. I sorely missed that at Lockheed, and I'm glad to say that I've since found an environment where I can learn from others who are better than me. There is a cult of seniority; a trite ranking of levels that have little to do with how good you are and everything to do with how long you've been there, at least for the first few levels. After that, the usual political maneuvering applies. The performance review process starts out with you copying and pasting the "personal objectives" that were given to you by management into an internal web application form. Some months later you go back to the web application and fill out how you fulfilled your personal objectives. These personal objectives consist of phrases like "I synthesized the strategic vision and leveraged internal and external synergies." You then get called into your boss's office and he gives you the standard middle-of-the-road approval that he has to in order to balance the quotas in the appropriate spreadsheet for his boss. Process and paperwork take up the majority of activity each day. Stifling quality control is what makes the wheels go round at Lockheed. It's a business focused on integration, not innovation. Plenty of lip service is given to innovation in motivational posters, slogans, recruiting paraphernalia, silly top-down initiatives and the like, but very little of it actually happens. In order to innovate at Lockheed, you have to break rules and make enemies. You have to go under the radar or you cannot accomplish any change. There are many people at Lockheed who have been doing the same thing for years and they will fight you. Even software engineers end up with the job of making sure that the appropriate hoops have been jumped through, all the forms have been filled out, and everything has been approved in triplicate. For all the process and ritual that we had to perform as software engineers, we skipped the important ones like unit testing and continuous integration. As a software engineer, you have no choice in the environment or tools that you use to perform your craft. You get a standard Dell laptop (if you're lucky) with Windows that is fully locked down. In order to install anything, you need to fill out a large form and get approval from around ten different people you've never heard of. This will take a couple of weeks at least. If by that time you need a new version of the software, you will need to submit a form again. You are not allowed to download anything from the Internet without permission. Your computer is controlled by the IT department and they will control it remotely whenever they feel like it. Microsoft Office is used for every piece of information. Outlook is where all the information flow is. You spend a lot of time searching through your Outlook inbox to find that something that you recall somebody sending you at some point. Information about the project your working on can only be found in unsearchable PowerPoint, Excel, and Word documents hidden in an obscure shared directory. Some information is hidden behind the most hideous and time wasting in-house web applications you've ever laid eyes on. Many of them only work with Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.

4.0
May 11, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I was surrounded by very skilled people. There was almost no deadwood anywhere. Very cool technology. Everywhere the attitude of stepping up to the plate.

Cons

Not sure how they got so many highly skilled people, because their interview process sucked. No one was trained how to perform a good technical interview; random techies were simply asked to look at a few résumés and choose a couple to invite for interviews. The annual performance review process was a time-wasting, unscientific disaster, changed every year and never for the better. Some employees, while very skilled, are completely unaware of recent software development practices.

Viewing 7 - 9 of 14,499 Reviews

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