Walmart Senior Programmer Analyst reviews

2.4

14% would recommend to a friend

(26 total reviews)
avatar

John Furner

Not enough data to show CEO approval

98% positive business outlook

Senior Programmer/Analyst employees have rated Walmart with 2.4 out of 5 stars, based on 26 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Senior Programmer/Analyst professionals have an average working experience there. Walmart is rated 32% below average by Senior Programmer/Analyst professionals compared to other employers within the Einzel- & Großhandel industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

26 reviews
3.0
Jun 23, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Scale is large, lots of teams to work with and opportunities to change area's. Being average or above average anywhere else is the same as almost being a god here.

Cons

45 hour work week minimal Lots of programmers who are not technical here. Lots. Many are now in the Tech Lead role instead of true programmers/technical. Saddled with legacy technology without clear plans to modernize much of it. Walmart is a cheap company after all.

3.0
Jun 10, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working at the Walmart Information Systems Division (ISD), AppsDev pillar, you get to work on apps that benefit customers and store associates directly, and contribute directly to savings that hit the bottom line. Very good focus on employee development, and a positive work environment. Managers and co-workers do care about you, even when you're out sick or having problems outside of work. Transfers are permitted to any area of Walmart, even encouraged. Salary is competitive for rural central US, significant bonuses 5K - 15K possible, plus stock. Some in-house training available. The renovation in progress is remaking the 3-floor windowless warehouse ISD buildings into a real office buildings with windows and new office furniture.

Cons

The near-freeze on hiring has led to declining headcount, off by 20% + now. Understaffed, adding 2000 contractors that constantly roll off adds its own issues. With so much work, I find myself having to constantly triage the incoming flow of requests. Working extra hours often doesn't help, it can feel like drinking from a fire hose. High performers can be (and have been) overrun and burned out. Health benefit deductibles that start at $6K cause many to treat it as catastrophic protection only, the result of major cuts in 2009-2011 that decimated the plans. No tuition or adoption benefits. Overall, Walmart is a cheap company to work for, very loath to spend money. You buy your own office supplies, reuse everything, so much it's held as a hallmark of company culture.

2.0
Jan 20, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

NW Arkansas is a nice area to live in.

Cons

Not a great place to work if you want to write code. Most of Walmart's software development is "remote sourced" to contractors in India. Walmart programmers mostly review code the contractors have written then at times have to fix it because the quality is poor. The company lacks any real direction in ISD. They change constantly but use outdated hardware, software and tools. The EDLC cost model is outdated and stale. Non of the systems in stores work right due to the constant drive to lower costs. The pay is at least 10% below what other companies pay for in house IT talent. The benefits are awful. The health insurance is a joke.

Viewing 16 - 18 of 26 Reviews

Glassdoor has 154,580 Walmart reviews submitted anonymously by Walmart employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Walmart is right for you.