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Lockheed Martin

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Lockheed Martin reviews about "upper management"

73% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

170 reviews
2.0
Feb 14, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Overall nice people who work at the facility.

Cons

Upper management is lost. The IT department MIGHT recover once the old leadership retires.

1.0
Sep 3, 2021

Disappointed

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Big company - decent pay / salary. Flexible with hours

Cons

No autonomy. Too much regulation form both corporate and upper management. No freedom to act.

4.0
Feb 4, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

One of the best companies in defense to work for. There's a lot of cool things being done. Benefits are good but could be better. A lot of job security. There's flexibility in work schedule.

Cons

People often try to shift blame or responsibility on others. Some people/departments are very reluctant to change and are bad at communicating. Diversity is lacking at the mid to upper management level.

1.0
Dec 3, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-The first layer of management is helpful and experienced, though they can't do much to alleviate the problems caused by upper management. -If you want a job where you'll never be asked to do anything useful, this is it.

Cons

Does not care about your health: Their immediate response to Covid was to require that any quarantine be taken as vacation, unless you could prove you contracted it at work. When this was made literally illegal in some states the policy was changed to "strongly encouraged" to make it up with overtime, and then reimplemented as soon as those laws expired. Does not care about your career: There are a few experienced technical staff who have been at the company for years. The policy of upper management was that these overworked staff must be on all projects that required technical expertise, and any newer staff were just added expense to be cut. Recent employees therefore had no chance to learn from more experienced staff, as they were not allowed to be on projects with them. More recent employees are also not given any opportunities to develop skills on their own; even if they manage to get a technical position on a project, as soon as upper management noticed they would demand the recent hire be removed and replaced with long-term staff. Recent hires with technical skills are instead used primarily as placeholders, filling a position so that project managers can say that position is filled. They are given little work and removed as soon as a more experience long-term staff member is available. Does not care about your time: You are required to assign all time worked in six-minute increments to projects, reported daily. Due to various bureaucratic problems and improper management, you will regularly be told with no notice that you are no longer on a project and will have to find something else by the end of the day to charge your time to. There is no overhead timecode, so you *must* find another project by the end of the day. Enjoy the regular frantic scramble to find some way to get paid! Does not respect your well-being: The company's other prominent Covid policy was to immediately outlaw all use of video in remote meetings. While other companies were doing everything they could to keep employees connected, Lockheed was declaring that the bandwidth required was too expensive. The software used is also very bad at noting who was speaking, so remote meetings consist of a series of anonymous voices with no associated faces.

5.0
Feb 12, 2022

Interesting work

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Different projects, a lot of room for growth

Cons

Upper management disconnect with team/ workers

Viewing 16 - 18 of 170 Reviews

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