Intuit reviews

4.2

83% would recommend to a friend

(11,725 total reviews)
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Sasan Goodarzi

81% approve of CEO

79% positive business outlook

Intuit has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 11,725 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Intuit 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

12K reviews
2.0
Oct 3, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free food, transportation, enough spotlight awards (if you are a pet of manager, I was one, so no complaints), high priced RSU (You get decent RSU if you are pet of Manager), dozens of hackathon (do something and talk some none sense, I did that for 5 years, and always got awards), great office and facilities. Awesome talented engineers

Cons

Company has so much cash in hand and very talented engineers from reputed companies. Products are decades old, in last 5 years I havent seen any engineer delivering something valuable to the company. But thats okay keep talking none sense, you will get decent perks again :) So whats wrong? if you are a talented engineer who is passionate about doing something and grow, dude you are trapped in this company. Then who enjoy this company? freshers who get paid a lot and does nothing other than extra circular activities , old aged guys who is old enough so that they can not contribute anything (no worries, no one contributes in this company :). You get screwed, if you are not a pet of you manager or a licker of management. Count your days, you will be part of next layoff . Forgot to tell every year intuit layoff (fire) ~500 high performing engineer who doesnt lick well :) (BTW I decided to leave not part of any layoff). About managers - Bangalore office, all managers are from **** service companies, now you know whats wrong? You wont find a single technically skilled manager who manages highly skilled engineers

1.0
Apr 7, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Cab, Food thats it you are a contractor.

Cons

1. Treatment for contractors are worst, No place to sit for contractors here you have to adjust near some corners. 2. Differentiating between contractors and FTE's will impact work very badly, Logic of "Unity in work and Diversity in Treatment" wont work, Treat contractors well and most of the time they are the real contributors to your projects and they Intuit never recognize the work of Valuable Contractors. 3. Contractors wont get Good Laptops (All are 2nd hand heavy old useless laptops), No facilities like FTE's, You never get any help if you are contractor here. 4. No Recognition for contractors and they follow the strategy of always FTE's 1st. 5. In one cubical you will find 4 FTE's sitting on big tables with all end to end comforts and around them nearly 10+ contractors sitting beside them on small chairs it feels like hell!! 6. In one word Treatment is not good for contractors compared to FTE's they see contractors as some what 'aliens' and based upon you as contractor or FTE people will give you necessary support. 7. How will you work with 100% efficiency if there is so much of difference they do in treating contractors? I don't understand how they rate this as one in top 10 IT's when contractors doesn't have place to sit?? If you don't believe my words ask intuit to perform internal voting from both contractors and FTE's and you will get the truth. !! HR's think on it!!

3.0
Sep 16, 2012

A Mixed Bag

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Intuit offers great benefits, that's for sure. To get the complete picture from a software engineer's perspective, please continue reading under "Cons"...

Cons

Intuit touts itself as a great place for engineers, and you may indeed get lucky and actually have a great experience there. In reality, it's a mixed bag, as one would expect in any large corporation. There are some groups within Intuit that are working on truly cutting edge technology in a start-up-like culture, whereas other departments are corporate America straight out of a Dilbert strip. Unfortunately, the latter seem to be the more common case. However, if you stay long enough, you might get a taste of both worlds, because reorganizations happen pretty frequently at Intuit. If something doesn't work out, a reorg is Intuit's preferred answer. To give you an idea: in less than 4 years at Intuit, I reported to five different managers, and each change happened pretty much entirely without my input. With one notable exception, my managers had very little to absolutely no clue about software development. Whereas it is common in large corporations, that technical skills fade out as you go up the corporate hierarchy, this phenomenon is taken to the extreme at Intuit. Already the very first level of management, those who directly manage engineers, are very non-technical. In other words, if you get stuck with a technical problem, your manager will most likely not be able to help you. In fact, she or he might not even understand what you're talking about. You might be lucky, and there is a more senior engineer on the team whom you could ask for help (but that doesn't work if the most senior engineer on the team happens to be you). I hate to say it, but the Peter Principle is in full effect at Intuit, and, quite often, engineering managers are failed engineers, promoted to their level of incompetence. As a corollary, the interview process for technical positions becomes somewhat compromised. Personally, my interview at Intuit was among the easiest job interviews I had in my entire career. Only two of my interviewers asked technical questions, one of them at a level that every fresh graduate could have answered without difficulties. I've seen software engineers hired onto my team whose interview panel did not include a single person capable of asking technical questions. You get the idea with what kind of engineers you will end up... you may get lucky and get some real talent, but unfortunately a lot of people slip through who probably should not have become software engineers in the first place. Intuit uses behavioral interviewing as the main technique for evaluating candidates. When, at some point, I ended up on some interview panels myself, I realized that I had hardly any time to ask technical questions, because I needed to fill out all the behavioral questions that I had to report back to HR. All these things said, Intuit is definitely one of the higher paying companies in the area. Based on my own interviews and job offers that I got, I can say that it's not impossible to beat Intuit's salaries, but it's pretty hard. And it gets even harder when you include non-salary benefits. Intuit provides generous bonuses and RSUs, 3 weeks of vacation in your second year, 3 flexible holidays, and even 4 paid days off for working on charitable projects. Healthcare plan options are pretty much top of the industry. Unless you get promoted, annual raises are rather measly, though. Personally, my annual pay increases barely reached the inflation rate, despite the company doing very well at the same time. Upper management complains a lot about not meeting goals, even if the company is making money hand over fist while the general economy is struggling. Getting promoted is rather difficult, and requires more political than technical skills. In other words, you are not going to get promoted for being an outstanding software engineer. Certain vertical moves, for example, from Senior to Staff Software Engineer, are especially hard to achieve. Unless you are highly skilled in corporate politics, you need to set at least 5 or 6 years aside for that to happen. Interestingly, it seems to be a lot easier to get hired into a Staff Software Engineer role than being promoted into it. Intuit is also one of the few companies that apparently tolerate stagnation in their employees. I've met many employees, who had 15, 20, or more years of "experience", which turned out to mean that they actually hadn't learned anything new for 15 or 20 years and pretty much still had the exact same skill set that they had when they were hired. If you are pursuing a career with Intuit, I recommend to be extra vigilant during the interviews. If the questions are ridiculously easy it gives you an idea what to expect of the other team members. Make sure you get a good picture of the environment of the project and of your future manager. Even though Intuit bought most of its more famous products (TurboTax, Mint, etc.) there are some pockets inside the company where real innovation is happening. You just have to find them...

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