Tesla reviews

3.5

58% would recommend to a friend

(11,930 total reviews)
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Elon Musk

59% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Tesla has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 11,930 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Tesla 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

12K reviews
5.0
Jun 27, 2017

Nothing Else Like It

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing work culture centered around what's best for you. Really takes care of their employees. Surrounded by innovation and great management. People actually work as a team. Hard work is recognized.

Cons

Workplace can get hectic and long shifts can be hard to get used to. Semi strict attendance policy.

2.0
Jul 26, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Meaningful goal to fight climate change. Compelling product. Strong brand. Well capitalized. Company vision was clear -- now a bit muddled with the likely additional of residential solar + storage to the mix. Lots of bright people, particularly in engineering where top talent is (at least temporarily) attracted to the flashy projects and given substantial (probably too much) freedom to deploy innovative designs in production. Elon-fueled hype is off the charts. Brand carries a lot of weight around the Valley. Graduates from many top universities clamoring to join the company due to this hype.

Cons

Operational dumpster fire. Manufacturing process control and quality assurance is amateur at best. Senior management overpromises on schedule and delivery numbers (driven from the top) but does not have the industry expertise and patience/discipline to deliver. Management's solution to their own incompetence is to work their employees harder, but this negative cycle is unsustainable. Many of the best employees leave and take their institutional knowledge with them. This exodus impacts production and management responds by making the new employees and those that stay work even harder still, driving more of the good employees out the door. You get the idea. Operations management is young and inexperienced. There is no Tim Cook to match Elon's Steve Jobs act. Few managers have prior automotive industry experience. Many decisions are seat-of-the-pants and it shows in the numbers and workflow. Operations executive turnover is high as Elon has little patience when these ill-prepared managers do not produce quick results. As a result of turnover and general disorganization, org decisions (hiring, promotion, layoffs) are largely political, not driven by KPIs or performance. Pay is well below market. Much of the compensation package is given as equity, but long gone are the days when the equity awards had upside potential. The stock price is sky high, and employees are likely to see their equity award's value shrink or remain flat over their vesting cycle. Overall, employees are treated as expendable. Training opportunities are basically nonexistence. Promotion is political and extremely competitive (unless you worked with a manager at their previous company or came from Apple). The few fringe perks once offered (free cereal and fruit, lunch vouchers for those who don't drive to work, and the occasional company party) have been almost entirely cut as a symbolic austerity gesture by finance. With acquisition of Solar City, an already unfocused, disorganized operation now has a huge curveball to deal with. I am very concerned that this integration will be the death of the company.

2.0
Apr 9, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Tesla attracted some really great individual contributors to build Model S. They get five stars for building a stellar product, and +1 more for opportunity to innovate in the automotive space. (Yes, I know that's 6 but they lose 4 for crappy management). The biggest plus for Tesla is that the CEO is willing to make mistakes and take risks. Tesla is also willing to incorporate relatively new technologies into their products. It is a company challenging the automotive industry to "do better" by setting a high bar for quality and features. This is worth involving yourself in, IMHO. So there are some excellent opportunities there.

Cons

The company's management and HR policies are awful (-4 stars for this). They sometimes promote managers from within, but engineers frequently have exceedingly poor people skills, at least they did at Tesla. To make matters worse, the HR policy uses "stack ranking" and each group is forced to pick one individual as "worst". These people, no matter how skilled, are culled once or twice a year. So if you are great at what you do, working with 4 other great people, one of you is going to get let go, doesn't matter if all are great. This is incredibly stupid! It creates an atmosphere of suspicion and non-cooperation, and psychological fear. Very bad. The work place itself is low rent: IKEA tables and chairs. Big, open, very noisy space; poorly lit and visually distracting with people walking between long aisles of "desks". It is furnished like a start up, but is a multi-billion dollar publicly traded company. Its bad enough that they tended to avoid showing the work area to potential hires. Tesla is a great place to "come from", but not a great place to be.

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