DISH reviews

2.8

32% would recommend to a friend

(7,806 total reviews)
avatar

Charlie Ergen

26% approve of CEO

26% positive business outlook

DISH has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 7,806 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The DISH employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Telecomunicaciones industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

8K reviews
3.0
Sep 21, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I love working for a large company that is constantly innovating and exploring new business lines - from satellite TV to smart home to wireless. The fast-paced, startup feel is exciting and challenging. In my experience, there are plenty of opportunities to learn new skills and choose a career path that interests you. Although there is still a lot of improvement that can be made to the company culture, it is encouraging to see some executives really making an effort and implementing meaningful change.

Cons

There are a lot of issues with the culture at DISH, mostly stemming from a lack of trust and emotional intelligence in DISH leadership. It starts in the C-Suite and trickles all the way down through VPs and Directors. We have core hours where we are required to be in the building because we can't be trusted to balance our work and personal lives. We don't have work-from-home options because we can't be trusted to be productive at home. We are micromanaged because we can't be trusted to work autonomously. Many of the leaders (mostly VPs and above) have little ability to effectively manage their emotions and consequently their employees. They are disconnected, vindictive, dominating, and quick to anger. And they are too close-minded to recognize the cultural issues, listen to their employees, and make a real change.

1.0
Jun 2, 2020

This is not a company that cares about employees

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Opportunities to learn There are some good employees They started letting us eat lunch outside last year!

Cons

- very bad benefits: there is no paid parental leave, the medical coverage is weak (with only one plan option), everything is at your expense except for short term disability (which is new this year), not a lot of PTO for new employees, and WFH was not widely allowed until COVID. -low pay: everyone I know that has left has easily jumped $10-15k. -no respect for employees: the biggest example of this is that everyone was working from home during COVID. The day that the state allowed people back to the office, Dish started bringing people back. Many people had no say and were forced in despite being very uncomfortable. Leadership continues to put out messages that the reason is for collaboration, even though collaboration was happening remotely and people aren’t allowed to collaborate in person in the office anyway. They keep pushing a message that everyone is super happy to be back, which is absolutely not the case. People don’t want to risk their lives just because Dish decided that butts need to be in seats. It is all about hitting that 50% quota, not making sure people feel safe. -leadership micromanages: directors and above constantly ask for reports on what everybody is doing and say it’s for prioritization purposes, rather than just trust managers to make the right decisions here. They track your time in office with a badge report. They want you to hit 42.5 hours in office. I’ve heard about people that have been told to take pto rather than badge in late on snow days, and many aren’t allowed to just work from home even though their positions are very capable of being done from home. -no respect for PEOPLE: layoffs happened yesterday with absolutely no warning. People felt ambushed by the news and then leadership tried to sweep it under the rug rather than own that it happened. No reasons were given as to why or how the people selected were selected. It just got blamed on COVID even though the message all along has been that we aren’t doing that bad. People got locked out of their computers without warning before even getting to say goodbye to anyone. It was not handled with dignity whatsoever.

2.0
Oct 24, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Opportunity for moving up if you dedicate the time to it and fit a certain "look". Yearly concerts were fun. Great networking opportunities. If you have good direct manager, you can be somewhat successful. Most people are pretty friendly there. If you ask for training, you can normally get it, such as certifications. Accommodation for TV services was great.

Cons

Healthcare coverage is absolutely terrible. The price vs. benefit is not worth while. "Good ol' boys" club at Director and above level (At least in IT), and if you aren't part of it, or willing to subject yourself to it you will struggle to move up. Discrimination based on looks, was told I was no longer eligible for advancement due to my appearances, which it is what it is, but if someone would've told me that before I started I wouldn't have worked there 6 years. My overall looks did not change in the time I was there. Annual "Trimming the fat" terminations is a disgusting practice, but mostly exists because there is no accountability for managers to actually manage their employees. It was not based on performance either, I was told I needed to cut someone from my team, and either I picked or they did. I let them pick as they were just trying to appease shareholders and lower our headcount. Core hours - You have to be there by 9 AM and can't leave before 4PM or you'll show up on a list. Used to be called badge report, they have changed the name but still monitor it as there is no trust with employees. If I had to work from home until 3 AM, I would still be expected by upper management to be in office by 9AM. You can see the mad rush of most employees leaving at "Core o'clock" at 4 PM. Annual PA scores are a joke, and should not be taken serious as I had times they told me to change all my employees scores just to fit a bell curve, and not actually based on performance. Was told that upper management didn't read any of my well thought comments on my employees scores, and that I just needed to lower to get an overall average number. Felt like there were many times that we would try to turn a ship on a dime to fit a change, without any input from the teams and Subject Matter Experts. Work from home policy, or therefore lack of, is pretty bad. If you have a manager that will fight for you, you're good, but if you have an issue at home and are capable of working from home you are expected to use time-off. Many two-faced directors and VP's there, they would do lip service to you in person, and then talk behind your back to other leaders. If you weren't on campus by 8:30, finding a parking spot was a challenge. Spots seem to be more narrow than the average parking lot, my car had more dings show up in the first year there, than it did in the 4 years before I started there. Lack of communication of changes from teams that directly impact other teams and users, with minimal accountability. I would often have to waste my time figuring out what changed, rather than someone coming forward with what they did. Charlie Ergen is used as a scapegoat for mundane things. Seems to be a lack of ownership for business decisions and everything is done because "Charlie wants it done this way".

Viewing 34 - 36 of 7,806 Reviews

Glassdoor has 8,261 DISH reviews submitted anonymously by DISH employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if DISH is right for you.