T-Mobile reviews

3.6

62% would recommend to a friend

(23,138 total reviews)
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Srini Gopalan

51% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

T-Mobile has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 23,138 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The T-Mobile employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Telecomunicaciones industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

23K reviews
1.0
Jan 30, 2019

DON'T GET SICK

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Bonuses are great. Good pay. Benefits/ perks for doing good work/ exceeding metric goals.

Cons

They treat you great in the beginning and will tell you anything you want to hear to make you feel like you are part of the team. But if you get sick, forget it. The company they use for their leave process will deny your claim no matter what and will continuously ask for more paperwork. T-Mobile uses this to to force you out, regardless of your past work history with the company. They don't treat chronic, debilitating illnesses seriously whatsoever. Before I left they were closing multiple departments and just having the phone reps take on the added responsibility without further pay compensation or training to an already overworked staff. They praise the "team of experts" design like it's the next best thing when in reality it causes longer hold times, more customer frustration and more call overflow. A lot of coaches will just tell you to do something but not give you the tools on how to succeed to accomplish the goal (ex. Setting sales goals without giving advice on how to achieve them. Increase survey scores with no advice on to achieve. "Just do it").

1.0
Feb 13, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very good benefits: -Annual stock grant -Solid ESPP -Lyft credits to/from offices -Generous PTO

Cons

VERY chaotic work environment. - People of all levels being hired without a place to put them, or hiring them for skills that they don't have. A rush to hire 'as many as possible' before the new year, and then having them sit around doing nothing come January. - When interviewing, HR will consistently lowball you. Unless the person in charge of the team has really taken a liking to you, the base pay is below average. - General lack of competence for the people managing devs and designers - Managers more interested in making themselves personally look good than they are in their projects succeeding - Specifically, I had a dev manager that offloaded his responsibilities to others, did not respect boundaries, regularly lied and justified it by saying our director agreed with him (this was never true), moved people between projects 1-3 times a week, and would call regular meetings to talk about himself. Even after countless complaints to our director and several conversations with HR for more serious issues, nothing was done. - Vast amounts of untrained developers with little understanding of version control and no experience with testing, linting, or even reviewing code. - Product designs changing every month or two, even though the product I was working on had been in development for years - No one knew what features the product had to have, and no one agreed on most features. Again, after years of development - Third party contracting companies that would only deliver minified code (!!), declare major tasks unimportant, attempt to rewrite contracts on the fly, attempt to sneak code into the codebase, consistently break things... - Lack of internal infrastructure. I came into work one day and my teams Git repo had mysteriously lost the last month and a half of work. When I found the person in charge of the server it was on, they said they had no backups, couldn't find anything in the logs, and to 'let them know if it happened again'. - When attempting to move to a different internal company repo, the team in charge of it sent us another teams onboarding doc and just did a Find-Replace of their name with ours. None of the URLs and credentials were correct, it took a week to get correct info and a bit over a month to get it working. - Nonexistent work/life balance for the front end devs on a related project in our department. They would be on call on the weekends, and would set an alarm for every hour to check if anything had broken. One told me they had gotten 8 hours of sleep in the past 3 days, and another had bags under his eyes the entire time I was employed there. Overall, a very stressful and demoralizing place to work. I left willingly because almost any other professional environment would be better than here. This is all of course specific to the department and project I was on, but the general attitude of other developers was not much better.

3.0
Feb 5, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Get to work on fairly new technology Inclusive workplace Stock purchase discounts Mobile service discount

Cons

Why in 2018 do we have a technology company that doesn't allow flexibility in work location, let alone work hours. TRUST your employees like other companies do. Measure RESULTS and not count warm bodies in the room. Parking can be a nightmare at HQ, yet managers continue to insist on being physically present.

Viewing 49 - 51 of 23,138 Reviews

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