IBM reviews

3.9

78% would recommend to a friend

(107,184 total reviews)
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Arvind Krishna

76% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

IBM has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 107,184 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The IBM employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

107K reviews
1.0
Mar 12, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- If you volunteer in your personal time, you can participate in interesting projects where you will learn a lot. Just remember that this is unpaid and in your personal time. - Interviews are not that hard and the company has a "students" program, which hires people with no experience. If you are starting your career, this could be good, but be careful of wasting too much of your life here (see the "cons" section). - Some employees volunteer to present talks and share knowledge. Most of the time, there are open to anybody in the company. If you pay attention and look for them, you can learn a lot. - Some very talented and smart people work here, and you can learn a lot from them. But precisely because they are smart and talented, they rarely spend a long time working for IBM.

Cons

- The Guadalajara office is very far away, and employees are required to go there frequently, with no clear reason. When asked why we need to be there, the managers look confused and mumble words like "collaboration", "innovation" and other nonsense, but no real explanation. - IBM frequently contractics itself. Sometimes they say they value inclusion and diversity while having favorites in their teams. Sometimes they say they value the environment and "new ways of work" while requiring employees to pollute by commuting to their far away campus. Sometimes they say the earnings are very high, while firing employees and not giving raises or bonuses in many years. - I spent many years at IBM and I never knew an IBM manager who had technical knowledge. They constantly needed to be explained the meaning of concepts like "the cloud", "Red Hat", and many others which are supposed to be the core business of the company. Often, the managers are even proud of not understanding even the basics of what their employees do. They rely on their employees doing their work for them. Managers only schedule meetings and ask for status, but they never really help their people. - The Guadalajara campus has adopted the worst practices from Mexican companies. Examples: Favoritism, old-fashioned managers who don't listen to their employees, backwards mentality, "putting the shirt on", requiring employees to attend "integration activities" which everybody hates, occur after hours, and obviously are not paid. - The IBM managers still think their employees are motivated by cheap T-shirts and tasteless pizzas. - Compared to other companies, salaries are average at best. And this is only after you spent years at the company and create a strong friendship with your manager so he chooses to give you bonuses or raises. - The things you will learn at IBM are rarely useful outside of IBM. The company uses technologies like DB2 and the IBM Cloud, which rarely are used by other companies. So, be prepared to have to spend a lot of time learning things that will be useless once you get a better job. If you are not careful, this could mean career suicide. You will have to invest a lot of your personal time to learn new things so you can keep being relevant in the market. - Most first-line and middle managers agree with whatever silly thing the VPs and C-level executive say. The CFO announced the return to the office and there was a strong backlash from the great majority of employees. The only ones with "positive" comments where middle managers with no self-respect saying things like "Wow, excellent news boss!", "I love going to the office to build culture!". They sound so fake and ridiculous and only show that they don't listen to their people. - IBM often has scandals, like executives firing older employees only because of their age (look for it online). This is just another company that only cares about numbers, not people. - IBM does not seem to know what they should focus on. Years ago it was "Mobile first", then in was the cloud and Red Hat, then it was Quantum, then AI. But IBM never shows leadership in any of these markets, they are often too late or too soon, but never at the right time. - IBM is famous for "firing" a lot of people, but cleverly masking it to avoid the bad press. They "separated" a big chunk of the company and called it "Kyndryl". They ask too much of their employees (like moving to another city in a few days) because they know people will quit, and they will not really have to actually "fire" so many people. There are many examples of this online, look it up. - Employees are expected to do "stretch assignments" (extra work) with no extra payment because this will give them "exposure" with upper leadership and it will look very nice in their yearly performance review. These are lies. I got bonuses and raises because I was friendly with the managers, but I saw a lot of people going the extra mile and being ignored completely. - Managers don't hide the fact that they like and dislike some people. I often heard managers talking behind their employees' backs, saying bad things about them to their co-workers. Extremely unprofessional.

4.0
Feb 28, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

My team is really flexible

Cons

Not every team works the same way

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