Boeing reviews

3.7

71% would recommend to a friend

(18,275 total reviews)
avatar

Kelly Ortberg

76% approve of CEO

55% positive business outlook

Boeing has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 18,275 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Boeing employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aeroespacial y defensa industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

18K reviews
2.0
Mar 3, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Money is good for the area. Benefits are top notch. At the end of the day, you are a part of a team that builds airplanes. That's pretty cool. A few people you work with are great people.

Cons

Where do I even begin? Decisions are made at the top, by leadership that may or may not be at this site. These decisions are executed, because some one with a title must have all the answers and be smarter than his or her entire workforce combined. As an engineer - you will see that most of these decisions aren't logical, will decrease efficiency, or will just not sustain long term. Guess what? Doesn't matter! You don't get to say no. Your voice doesn't matter. You may even know the answer or have a better idea. But you're not in charge. So lose it, pal! In the first building I worked in, the man in charge was a model of leading with an iron fist, usually with a condescending or threatening tone. The building ran inefficiently and most people hated their jobs. 10-14 hr days Mon-Fri the norm. If you weren't willing to give your life to it, go back to nothing you did before you came here! Then he retires, a really nice, smart man takes his place. This guy actually leans on his specialized departments to come up with solutions for him. He also asks questions rather than dictates. The factory gets healthy, and peoples attitudes became more positive building-wide. 2nd building I worked in still hasn't figured it out. Guy in charge might ask other departments for solutions, but if the whole factory isn't healthy in 48 hours he insists on trying something different. He never allows them to "sustain the gains" of any improvement. Too much change. Plus, he promoted a person who happens to be female in to power that should've never been given any power at all. She's just feeds off of it and wants it so badly you can smell her desire for power the minute you meet her. She's also very mean. Definitely the kind of person you want making the calls. 3rd building I worked in... All decisions are business decisions and they are not up for debate. I think you see the trend. Nobody is actually allowed to do their job well. You just do your job as you're told and the entire site somehow manages to operate kind of okay like. Don't you dare question their authority! They do not value engineers. They build planes based on "because I said so", not engineers. Not lean tactics. Not best practices or build plans. I'd be shocked if they make it another 100 years using the business model they use today. And I don't mean their business model on paper. I mean the business model they practice.

3.0
Dec 20, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The work can be pretty fast paced, and the subject matter is exciting to anyone with an interest in aerospace. Good cross-functional teamwork, where "wrench turners" and engineering types are able to work side-by-side to solve issues or improve processes. Pay is reasonable for the area, and the benefits and 401K are industry-leading

Cons

Being a new employee in engineering can seem aimless. There isn't much of an onboarding process involved other than meeting your manager, being shown your desk, and getting the stack of boxes containing your computer and accessories. While there is a high-level orientation all employees go through, there's not much to speak of when you get to your work location. The experience feels disorienting to someone who isn't quite sure what is expected of him, and you get the sense that many questions you have to bug your co-workers with could have easily been answered had there been some form of organization with getting you up to speed. Previous employers have had this in place, and the transition from being green and aimless to having a clear picture of responsibilities and role was smooth and relatively painless. At Boeing, it's more of a dive into the deep end of the pool when 1) You don't really know how to swim, and 2) You're not sure how deep the water is. I'm devoting the entirety of the Con section of this review to this one topic, because I feel it's absolutely crucial to get it right, and that Boeing has to do a better job with it. I've been in my current position for over 10 months, and in many cases, I still feel clueless about some things. It's not that I haven't asked the right questions, it's that there are questions I had no idea I was supposed to ask. On top of this is the added stress of the Performance Review process, where you're given vague items that you have to address, without even knowing how exactly the PR process works (another item that could easily have been covered within the first week on the job).

Viewing 493 - 495 of 18,275 Reviews

Glassdoor has 20,621 Boeing reviews submitted anonymously by Boeing employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Boeing is right for you.