DISH reviews

2.8

31% would recommend to a friend

(7,807 total reviews)
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Charlie Ergen

24% approve of CEO

26% positive business outlook

DISH has an employee rating of 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 7,807 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
1.0
Mar 14, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

There's perhaps only two positive things I can say about working in finance at Dish's headquarters: it's very easy to advance by just sticking around, and it will make every job after you leave seem like a dream.

Cons

Dish as a company is behind the times in every way, and is making no effort to improve. The environment at the Englewood headquarters is toxic, and management (from the very top down to lower level) shows no sign of even acknowledging the problem. Some of the most glaring cons are as follows: 1.) Respect. It is very clear that Dish does not respect, or trust their employees in any way. Likewise, employees neither respect or trust the company. Almost everyone openly mocks the company and it's policies, often in the office. 2.) Compensation. Pay starts off competitive, but tiny yearly increases mean you will quickly fall behind the hot Denver market. Dish is cheap in every way, and will not pay to keep talent. 3.) Turnover. Dish's turnover is shockingly high, and the finance department was no exception. People become fed up and burnt out at a rate i've never seen. It's difficult to build work relationships outside of your unit as the people you connect with usually leave soon after. Talented managers and employees have no reason to stay, and they don't. 4.) Working conditions. This is something that should be a non-issue anywhere, but it is an issue here. The Englewood office is outdated, overpopulated, and difficult to work in. Overcrowding is the main issue -- there are simply not enough bathrooms or space to comfortably house 2000+ people in this building. Overcrowding coupled with an open office is a disaster that leads to low productivity and aggravation. There are none of the typical open office design elements that help combat visual and audible distraction. 5.) Management. Management is a problem from the top down at Dish. I feel that lower management is forced to embrace the toxic culture pushed down on them, and even good managers cannot make any meaningful change that will impact their employees. Most do not even try. 6.) Rules. Dish sets strict rules that have a negative affect on moral and productivity. The company expects you to be flexible for them, but will not be flexible with you. 7.) Productivity. Productivity is low at Dish for many reasons. The extreme turnover is the main cause, but many employees simply do not care about their job. This can make it difficult to stay motivated or to find help on a project. 8.) Work life balance. New employees in finance will enjoy six months to a year of reasonable work life balance. After a year, most will become overworked and stressed as work piles up and team members continually quit all around. Senior members of the finance team are always overburdened, unhappy, and unsupported. 9.) Reputation. Dish has a stigma in Denver, and other local employers are very aware of it. Be careful of branding yourself with a scarlet letter.

2.0
Nov 30, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

*You will get to work with some very smart people on interesting projects. They will say that opportunity is one of their biggest benefits and to a degree its true, just be aware of why you're getting that opportunity, its because of the high turnover/attrition. *Good opportunities to get promoted internally because they rarely hire from the outside other than entry level. *They do a pretty decent job at trying to make the work environment fun (in spite of the outdated HR policies) with events around things like Oktoberfest, Halloween, March Madness etc. *If you get into a good org and have interesting projects then life will be bearable

Cons

*There is only one opinion in the company that matters and its the Chairman's. Every decsion is made through the lense of will this make the Chairman happy instead of what is logical and the best for the business. This leads to little autonomy/agency even at the most senior levels of the organization. *No bonus structure or performance based incentives and below market initial comp and increases. This leads to top talent leaving on a very quick timeline because they are not compensated any differently than mediocre performers who do the miniumum to get by. * Terrible, antiquated HR policies. No parental leave (they just use STD for pregnant mothers and absolutely no paternity leave); No possibility of work from home; 9AM badge report is a real thing that sends a notification to multiple managers above you if you badge in after 9AM (a sadistic form of entertainment on bad traffic/weather days is watching people at 8:59 run across the parking lot to try to get in before 9AM); Hours in the building are tracked instead of productivity. This creates a bizzare incentive structure where people are judged on if they were in the building for the right amount of hours instead of if they are being productive and exceeding the expectations for their responsibilities. This definitely manifests in a punch in/punch out culture where people do the bare minimum and drag it out instead of quickly and efficiently completing their work.

2.0
Aug 12, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Most of my fellow technicians were some of the best men I have ever worked with. There were two jobs I was stuck on in the freezing cold at night and on both occasions two guys were willing to come out and help me finish. The management at my shop was great, they were always looking out for the best for me and took a genuine interest in my success. I could call them at any time and they would pick up and give me advice or send help if I needed it. The training was decent, spent a week in a classroom learning the basics and then doing ride - alongs for around two months. Can't beat paid on the job training. The senior manger was awesome. He always kept it real and asked me how I was doing with work and life. The day I left he firmly shook my hand and was genuinely bappy for me. He realized how the company worked and wasn't surprised that I was moving on. Truly some of the greatest men I have ever known I worked with at this job because we all were in the struggle together.

Cons

I have never felt as demeaned as a human being than as I did while working for Dish. I told them from the start I needed Sundays off which as soon as I was on my own they gave me Tuesday and Wednesday off. I knew I would have to work at least one day on thd weekend but they completely disregarded it. Once you're on your own that's it. They throw you out there by yourself to figure everything out. You may get 3 jobs a day but after a couple months they give you around 5 jobs a day, although that does include easier trouble calls and such. Normally you work from 8-4 but with having to go to the shop and running into issues at your job can leave you working an average of 12 hour days which is where I was when I left. I think the longest day I worked was from 6am to 10:30pm because it was an hour drive to the area I was scheduled in. The call center has no sympathy which is understandable because they have no idea of the hell you go through on a day to day basis. We were supposed to call in at 4pm to see if there were any more jobs if we had already finished our route for the day; mind you they could then throw an install at you which they knew you wouldn't finish until 7pm. There was no such thing as a set schedule, be at your first job by 8 and call if you're finished by 4. You're just a number helping to get their numbers up. Don't even get me started on CSATS. They measure your pay Tier based on the most retarded scale. For example if you don't hook a Hopper system to the Internet, EVEN IF THE CUSTOMER DOESN'T HAVE INTERNET, they count it against you. Then if you go to a job that someone else installed completely jacked up, and you're just there to change a bad connector, your name goes on the job. That means that if they QA, "Quality Inspect" it, it counts against you like you were responsible. Happened to me multiple times and I wasn't going to reinstall their whole setup for $15. Then because of this a rep from corporate started showing up at my jobs because "he was in the area". That's when I knew it was time to move on, the system is jacked. Then they emphasized sales. If you didn't sell enough customers items they didn't need and meet quota that counted against you. I'm not a salesman by any means and maybe I had too much compassion for the industry, but I would only try to sell people items they NEEDED like surge protectors or wireless routers. It became mandatory to demo headphones and soundbars. Don't get me wrong I sold a few but that was because the customers could afford it. They want you to go in a home with 6 kids who have bought their service with bad credit and try to sell them extravagant home theatre equipment. I can't tell you how many jobs I went back on to fix poorly installed equipment in run down homes and they have a $100 set of headphones that another tech pushed to them while knowing they were screwing the customer over with a horibble install. The only way to make good money there was to be there for at least 3 years to have the experience to blow through jobs and basically have no soul to your customers. These were the techs who were pulling $800 a week. For my advice it is not worth it if you're intelligent and looking for a career. Turn around time for my office was 6 months. There were only 2 lead techs who had been working for 5 years for Dish and honestly they were bitter because they were stuck. If you need a job to fill in some time this is the job for you. There's no career advancement either. If you want to be in management at a shop you have to wait until the current manager either dies or retires. The hours suck, the pay scale is retarded and broken, the company does not care about you as a technician because they know that as soon as you leave there will be another Joe to fill your spot for 6 months. The vehicles are in horrible condition and they will trade you one broken down vehicle for another that's almost there. Do yourself a favor and spare yourself the trouble. I would recommend this job only for the man who wakes up every morning with a dream to compromise their time with their family and friends and is willing to be screwed for the rest of their lives so other families can sit in a warm living room and enjoy watching tv.

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