Boeing reviews

3.7

71% would recommend to a friend

(18,229 total reviews)
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Kelly Ortberg

75% approve of CEO

54% positive business outlook

Boeing has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 18,229 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Boeing employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aeroespacial y defensa industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

18K reviews
2.0
Mar 30, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They hire at true entry-level and will take chances on individuals right out of university. Ability to flex hours.

Cons

Boeing is desperately trying to pretend that they are the amazing aerospace company they used to be. But this snotty pretense lands hollow and employees get disillusioned quickly. Lack of innovation, they have a fear of modernizing and of change. They became angry and vindictive when anyone tries to use newer technology. It is like working in a factory, even as an engineer. You feel like you aren’t there to think, but to be a mindless. They care only about shareholders, not their products. Meaning everything is done cheaply, carelessly and without passion. Compensation is not keeping up with market.

1.0
Nov 9, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good Benefits - Excellent Retirement Benefits (6% company match + 3% for free) - Overall pretty good work-life balance, flexible schedule - Good coworkers, most are very smart and pleasant to work with - Allowed to WFH full-time during Covid-19 (up until I left in mid-2020)

Cons

I worked in 2 different teams during my time at Boeing, the DSP Algorithms team and the Satellite Flight Software team. These were both under the Defense/Space side of Boeing, so I can only speak about my experience within that branch of the company. BUREAUCRACY: Boeing is a huge company, so there’s a stifling amount of bureaucracy that you have to deal with here. Literally every step of your work has to be reviewed and approved by several people. Boeing loves to preach about innovation but the truth is that the bureaucracy stifles any breath of innovation, as there’s almost always a mentality of, “We’ve always done things this way! It works, so don’t change it!” INCOMPETENT MANAGEMENT: Almost all of the managers I worked with were frustrating to work with in some capacity, and many really didn't seem to care about their employees: I was initially hired to work as a DSP Algorithms Engineer at Boeing. After a few months, I realized that the type of work that they do (Simulink & Matlab) was not what I wanted to spend 8-9 hours of my day on, so I asked management if I could switch to a team that works on software. They were initially understanding and supportive of my decision, but after only about 3 months being able to work on software, they pulled me back into doing systems engineering work for 6 months. The worst part was that they did not even give me this news through an in-person chat (this was pre-COVID); they simply notified me through an email... Because nothing screams "we care about our employees" like telling them they have to immediately switch back to doing the work they disliked for half a year through an email... Another manager that I worked with for my first program basically micromanaged me and constantly asked me for my progress status almost every day at a certain point, because the program had slipped in schedule. I was a new-hire at the time, and was the only person actively working on verification, so I have no idea how they expected me to meet their schedule virtually alone. The final task I had to complete for the systems engineering team before switching to the software team for the first time was a software tool to allow the hardware team to do some of their verification testing. This same manager slept on the code that I gave their team for 9 MONTHS before properly testing it, and then expected me to prioritize working on his program to debug that software tool while also working full-time on the software team. They had the audacity to claim that their program had “a much more pressing schedule” than the software team's, yet somehow didn't bother to test my software tool with their hardware for 9 months. Another manager that I worked under did not seem to understand that I was frequently being pulled into doing work for both the systems and the software teams at the same time due to program schedules. They kept insisting that I put in a full 40 hours a week to keep up with my software tasks, and to only work on the “urgent” systems engineering task as overtime. This was right when COVID-19 and lockdowns were starting, and everyone was already anxious about the situation. Because I was frequently being bothered by my former team and the hardware team to help debug work that I hadn't touched for nearly a year, I was unable to complete all of the tasks I was given on the software team in time. This was held against me by this manager, who didn't allow me to officially switch into the software team due to many of my software tasks slipping schedule. Frustratingly, this same manager was the one that told my primary manager to reassign me back into doing systems work in the first place. They had me reassigned to a team outside of software, yet when I was back on software, complained that I wasn't getting the work done in time, which was also partly due to my lack of experience with the processes that the software team followed, which I could've avoided if I was never reassigned outside of the software team in the first place. This pathetic excuse of a manager was the biggest reason why I eventually left, as they obviously did not care about their employees. LACK OF HANDS-ON WORK: Both teams that I worked on while at Boeing involved working with the hardware. However, we engineers on these teams did not get the opportunity to WORK on or test our designs/code on actual hardware. Instead, ALL of the work that we did was tested in simulations. Yes, Boeing is so compartmentalized that the people who do hands-on testing with the hardware are completely separate teams, and in my experience, I never even worked with them. If you're like me and enjoy working with/seeing the physical side of your engineering efforts, Boeing is probably not the company you want to work for... DEPRESSING WORK ENVIRONMENT: Across the 2 teams that I worked with while at Boeing, I worked in 3 different locations. All 3 were cube farms, with the last one before I left being the most depressing of all; it was basically a giant warehouse with about 100 cubes crammed into it. It was stuffy, contained no windows, and suffered from bad lighting. Forcing everyone to work from home because of the COVID situation was actually a bit of a blessing in this sense, as I no longer had to come into a stuffy, depressing cube farm everyday. LACK OF AMBITION: Like I said in the Pros section, many of the people (non-managers) I worked with were good and smart people, but you’d be hard-pressed to find any employees who truly enjoy their job and look forward to coming in to work everyday. A large amount of the people I worked with were either complacent in their current role or were applying to leave the company as soon as they could. This is a company where your ambition dies the longer you stay here.

1.0
Oct 6, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I can’t think of any except work life balance and not even. Boeing expects you to work as a lead for 2 years before they promoted you to the level you are working. So in terms of work life balance you are expected to put in 50-60 hours while only working 40.

Cons

Morale is at an all time low for software engineers. Most to all people on my team and other teams are actively training for interviews in order to leave. The compensation is about half for the area so most software engineers under P3 make under 113,000 in San Francisco and along Beach California. They actually gave effective pay cuts this year! In addition, Boeing recognize the lazy employees and overachievers the same. They prioritize years of experience and age over talent ,performance, and skills. If you are looking for a job and want minimum compensation come here. If you want to be paid fairly don’t come here and if you want to grow your technical skills don’t come here. Boeing does everything it can to dumb down its systems so they don’t have to hire software engineers. Truly a horrible place.

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