Philips reviews

3.8

73% would recommend to a friend

(10,485 total reviews)
avatar

Roy Jakobs

74% approve of CEO

54% positive business outlook

Philips has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 10,485 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Philips employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Produktion industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

10K reviews
2.0
Jul 5, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good health and overall benefits

Cons

Unless you live in India, Poland, or Panama, you have ZERO job security with Philips. It is widely known and spoken about by Leadership - exact words "The company is not performing as well as it should and therefore cost control is vital if Philips wants to continue to deliver solutions to our customers at "affordable prices". While we are optimizing our costs on multiple levels, one of the actions is optimizing our location footprint to reduce our labor costs by moving resources to "Low Cost Countries" (USA is not one of them...).

avatar
Philips Response
3y
Thanks for leaving us a comment here. We're sorry to hear your experience working with Philips hasn't been a very positive one. We’re interested in providing our people with a rewarding career experience, so it's unfortunate this wasn't the case for you. We recommend scheduling a meeting with your HR representative or manager to discuss some points of improvement. We're also actively reading all reviews on this platform, so your feedback will be taken into consideration to improve our ways of working. Thanks for supporting our mission to improve people’s lives. Wishing you all the best.
3.0
Mar 2, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Understanding and supportive management team 2. Remuneration is as per MNC standards with continuous improvement

Cons

More cons than pros really. This company tops my list as the most complex and chaotic place I had worked. The only reason to stay is because of a team of very understanding and supportive management and their continuous strive towards improvement of the work environment . Otherwise, here's the list of cons: 1. Work life balance is bad for a company that has a vision of improving health for billions of people. My mental and physical health have definitely suffered from the lean structure but super ambitious goals cascaded down with work and trigger happy ideas from working the region that requires a huge team of people to do the work, but there isn't. 2. Too many meetings, daily 80% business hours a day is spent on meetings after meetings, and eventually no time to do the work, or to focus on what matters to drive scale. So, no choice but gotta work late, or suffer the consequences. Also, be ready not to hv control of your workday, people will just block time your for meetings, even if it is lunch time. Whatever slot they can find, so to get it off their chest, their plates or whatever their intent is. So be sure to block time to eat. 3. Many complex processes and systems with gaps everywhere. Some system tools just continuously have issues, preventing timely execution and or to execute with excellence. 1001 separate systems and tool to use, and some tools are just not intuitive. To get full picture of something, be ready to extract info from different tools to put it together manually, super time consuming. 4. When face with system issues, standard words from anyone would be "Raise a ticket to IT". And there we are, all operations is now just a ticket, in the hands of people who really doesn't care much about how that glitch affect the business. 5. Some categories leaders from regions are just super pushy and forceful, and doesn't want to even try to understand market operations issues we have to deal with everyday that are impeding certain intents or ambitions. Very different from management team who provides solutions. Sometimes, I do think these pushy people only wanted to look good and succeed on their own, not the team up spirit that the company try to foster. Also, if they work long hours or a workaholic, they expect others to be like them. Frequently getting request emails in the late afternoon to ask for something complex (requiring plenty involvement from different stakeholders), to be delivered next morning. While negotiation on deadline is possible, but be ready to hear snide remarks. To be fair, there are also people who are extremely helpful and understanding towards a new team, and I believe these are the people who want to succeed as a team. 6. Chaotic work processes at present, but kudos to management team who hear people on the ground, and working towards improvement and closing those gaps. While it is not perfect, but the effort is appreciated. 7. Many inconsistencies when working with different business groups. Also, plenty issues and mistakes from information cascaded down globally. They ain't feeling the pain from local operations resulted from all these inconsistencies. 8. New people feel extremely overwhelmed. 1st week of joining, we are not just bombarded with plenty of onboarding and system tools orientations (and navigating a new organisation wfh is not exactly the easiest) but also plenty of work , some of which were pending for few months. The pressure to complete doesn't come from management but the working level team, and we are expected to solve the issues without context. People lack empathy, and regardless if one is one week old or one month old, they just push for completion just to get it off their plates. 9. Fridays are the designated days by the company as a no meeting day so employee can spend time thinking, planning for work etc. But who cares right, most people dont respect it and will continue to block time for meetings. 10. Management are trusting and supportive in building skills and experineces for new team, but some people at the working level aren't. Many times, you will notice people who has been in the organisation for a long time, in their snide comments and remarks seems to insinuate that the new people sit around and do nothing. High turnover rate. Overall, happiness index for me, definitely low.

avatar
Philips Response
4y
Hi there, thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts on working for our company in such detail. We highly appreciate your feedback. We're sorry to hear that you've so far experienced working for Philips in Singapore to be chaotic and complex. It's very important to us that our employees are able to maintain a good balance between work and their personal life and that our processes are easy to follow and systems easy to use. We regret that this isn't the case for you, but we're glad to read that the management team is listening to you and to others from your department and is making changes. Please feel free to also share your thoughts with your HR representative, if you haven't done this yet, to see how things could be improved further. The management team that monitors all reviews here on Glassdoor is listening as well and will make sure to duly note your points of feedback. These are very valuable to us. Thank you again for sharing your experience. We wish you all the best moving forward.
5.0
Nov 30, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Medical imaging is one of the most exciting markets for software engineering, and Philips has a strong culture of collegiality, together with extremely bright minds.

Cons

It's a large company, with its share of political overhead and burocracy in the decision process.

Viewing 13 - 15 of 10,485 Reviews

Glassdoor has 14,802 Philips reviews submitted anonymously by Philips employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Philips is right for you.