employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Lockheed Martin

Is this your company?

Lockheed Martin reviews

4.1

83% would recommend to a friend

(14,515 total reviews)
avatar

James D. Taiclet

82% approve of CEO

72% positive business outlook

Lockheed Martin has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 14,515 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

15K reviews
2.0
May 22, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-The company has a lot of prestige. -There are some very talented people working there. Unfortunately, these people are completely unappreciated. -Good opportunities to learn on the job and take on more responsibilities (due to short-staffing, unfortunately).

Cons

-Very low pay. If you're going to work for LM, be sure to negotiate aggressively before accepting the job offer. From what I saw, management was always willing to negotiate and there was a lot of variation in what employees with the same job made salary-wise. This variation had NOTHING to do with talent, hard work or qualifications and everything to do with how much you demanded up front. Also, be confident during the interview process, especially when dealing with HR. HR never seemed to know anything about the different departments, so if you sounded like you knew everything, they assumed you knew everything and moved you forward. -Once you're at LM, expect minimal pay increases that sometimes don't even cover cost of living. -Their merit system is a joke. On the plus side, if you just want to work your 40 hours a week and put minimum effort into your job and maybe spend time with your family, you can do that here and you'll get the same rating as that person working 80 hours who's always going above and beyond and who is a real team player. However, if you're that 80+ hour team player, it doesn't work in your favor and no matter how hard you try, management will always find a reason to not give you that top rating. -Non-functioning HR department. Sometimes I was not paid, I did not receive my health benefits the first year on the job due to a "computer glitch," and there were numerous other issues with actually using all the great benefits LM promises. Numerous other co-workers, at least in my division, had similar issues, though none as bad as mine. Basically, LM has a HR helpline that is expected to handle most of your HR issues, including issues with pay. Some of these helpline employees really try, but they only have the most basic information and the whole process is reminiscent of the DMV. For example, when I did not receive a pay check one week, I called my HR rep who told me to call the helpline. I called the helpline and they told me to call the HR rep. I went round and round until my manager and her supervisor, who were wonderful, stepped in and fought for several days to straighten out the situation. -Chronic short-staffing. This really depends on how the contract is structured. Some contracts have it so that LM bills the client by the hour. These jobs are very cushy and employees can take forever to get the job done. Our contract was the opposite, we received a set pot of money to work with, so we had 50% of the employees we needed and that we had claimed we would have when we made the bid. What this meant was long hours (sometimes 80-100, usually 60 hours a week), working on holidays (I worked Easter, Fourth of July, Labor Day, for example), and LM was always pushing us to work more while pushing us to be more 'efficient.' At the same time, there were people in the unit who were playing around on the Internet all day, running off to Atlantic City unannounced for several days and who left early at 3pm most days. They were not fired and received the same performance reviews all the other employees received. So if you want to just get by, this is a great company.

2.0
Feb 13, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lockheed Martin is a Big Huge Defense Contractor. The upside is, you do get to work on some of the best jets in the world. The pay is okay for the industry, but only in terms of starting salaries. Benefits are average at best. The entire LM corporation is massive, and you have access to literally thousands of jobs in the database--but you have to do the legwork yourself, since HR is worse than useless.

Cons

Lockheed Martin is a Big Huge Defense Contractor, and LM has become their customer, namely the federal government. The bureaucracy is literally worse than the Pentagon, and the simplest new activity requires weeks of approval meetings from people who have no idea what your job is, and reams of paperwork to be shuffled away into impenetrable databases. The Security department is mostly populated by idiots, and trust in employees (including those with high security clearances) is nil. Raises are set by computer (despite what HR tells the managers to say every year), and average around 2%. Recognition is minimal unless you're part of the unassailable Diversity cult. Mindless processes abound, and the endless HR-mandated "training" courses would insult the intelligence of a coffee table, as well as being an insult to the integrity of 99.999% of the employees. The most common event in an LM engineer's life is to hear a bean-counter or paper-pusher saying, "You can't do that." The second most common event in an LM engineer's life is to hear a bean-counter or paper-pusher saying, "That's not my job." Upper management is clueless about day-to-day operations, and mostly interested in heading off bad press coverage.

2.0
Dec 27, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lockheed Martin Information Systems has a lot of contracts across the United States, with a lot of Federal and state agencies. So Lockheed Martin Information Systems is almost always hiring somewhere, at some time. They are a known "brand" so they might look good on your resume, and the job title they give you might even impress someone who doesn't know any better. But the best reason to work for Lockheed Martin Information Systems is the deep feeling of joy and satisfaction when you quit for a job that isn't sucking all the joy out of your life. Your opinion might vary.

Cons

Oh, let me tell the ways I hated, hated, hated working there. I had a fairly decent job working for another Federal contractor with good wages and respectable raises annually. Lockheed Martin Information Systems came in with a "low ball" bid and won out over the good company that had that contract but to fulfill the contract for the rates they bid, they fired half the incumbent staff (and the firings seemed to be of everyone earning more), and dragged in inexperienced temps to take over from staff who had been doing the job for years. They hired people at one salary and then announced a lower salary on the first day. They were very closed mouth about how much new hires would be paying for health care, so the salary you negotiated in good faith was suddenly about 75% of that amount, with the rest going to pay for insurance. There's no paid family leave--my husband was in a coma but I had to come in and work every day because we wouldn't have had an income, otherwise. Oh, and the white men were routinely paid more than minorities and women.

Viewing 187 - 189 of 14,515 Reviews

Glassdoor has 16,650 Lockheed Martin reviews submitted anonymously by Lockheed Martin employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Lockheed Martin is right for you.