Texas Instruments reviews

3.8

69% would recommend to a friend

(5,720 total reviews)
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Haviv Ilan

59% approve of CEO

55% positive business outlook

Texas Instruments has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 5,720 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Texas Instruments employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufactura industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
2.0
Feb 26, 2015

Disappointed at the end.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

TI provides great benefits: competitive salary, annual stock options and grants, employee stock purchase plan, vacation, 401K with matching, profit sharing and sales bonus if in sales department. Great portfolio for every application. Unbeatable price for their customers. Great factory and support staff. Competent technical and sales staff.

Cons

It seems like TI has turned into less innovation and more me too, low cost product company. Hiring fresh engineering graduate students with no real experience and after short in-house training assign them as sales engineers supporting customers. As expected some don't make it. Sales staff are unhappy with the latest company accounting practices, finding this immortalizing and wasteful. Sales staff performance is highly effected by constant price discounting. Some Senior management believes is leading with fear, intimidation and bullying.

2.0
Feb 18, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of smart and hard working people, lots of IP resources and training opportunities. Relatively decent pay and training environment for fresh graduates.

Cons

The office politics and good ole boy networks are everywhere. No upward career path at all if you plan to stay in the company long term. Upper management have no vision longer than a year.

3.0
Oct 30, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You will be given as much responsibility as you show you can handle, quickly, and will have lots of opportunity to learn new skills. If you have deep specialization in areas that are important to the business you will (probably) have pretty good job security - as long as the company stays in that business area.

Cons

Entitlement mentality towards uncompensated labor from middle and upper management. Highly political and sometimes bullying environment, entrenched mediocrity in middle management, "blame the troops" backstabbing from incompetents. Managers and employees who understand and accept the status quo of "needing" to be highly political take credit for the work of others who won't or haven't figured out how to play the political game. Unspoken but well known mafia system where those who get made survive all layoffs regardless of whether they maintain their business or technical edge, and get to wet their beaks at the bonus pool whether they put in a strong contribution for the year or not. Company and upper management shift the product strategy and cede markets to nimbler competitors with regularity. Poor documentation & dissemination of company specific technical knowledge means that such knowledge resides only with those who are willing to throw work/life balance in the trash and do organizationally inefficient individual from-scratch learning (basically reverse engineering the company's own IP), creating a perverse differentiator for compensation and advancement , a two-class technical staff, and key personnel risks for the company. If you are a talented and creative individual, you are selling yourself incredibly short by becoming a lifer here.

Viewing 79 - 81 of 5,720 Reviews

Glassdoor has 7,386 Texas Instruments reviews submitted anonymously by Texas Instruments employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Texas Instruments is right for you.