RTX reviews

3.8

74% would recommend to a friend

(7,778 total reviews)
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Christopher T. Calio

60% approve of CEO

67% positive business outlook

RTX has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 7,778 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The RTX 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

8K reviews
1.0
Aug 7, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Lovely people on staff for the most part. Despite a short stay, I still keep in touch with the great majority of my former co-workers - Relatively easy. Raytheon is not on top of their workflow, management is poor (at least in finance in SAS). This makes it easy to simply exist and collect paychecks if that's your zone - Good benefits. 9/80 schedule can allow for every other Friday off (should your schedule permit you to do that, which mine did not on most occasions

Cons

- Untrustworthy. No exit interview, zero follow up as to why I left etc. - Turnover. I hired into a team that had brought in about 5 new employees within a few months of my joining. Within the year, 3 employees have left the company and a few others are trying to leave. There is little to no recognition for being a top performer. A co-worker of mine routinely worked 60 hours a week, almost never took their 9/80s, received little no support from our manager (who subsequently left our group to work in FPA, so no worries she took care of herself); all of this while working through his MBA. I have never worked for a company I'd say this about - but I'd highly recommend that any top talent (top tier school, CPA/MBA, etc) avoid working here unless its a stepstone. You'll be under paid, over-worked, and few people have the ability to really teach you anything significant. You will instead routinely receive templates that are "idiot-proof", but don't work. Or data entry like instructions for major EVM/EAC reporting, simplifications that do not require any real understanding (which is reflected in the constant negative EAC's and ridiculous management targets that follow).

1.0
Sep 21, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits. Work/Life balance, 9/80 schedule. Ideally, you should work directly for your section head or even better for your department head. Then you do not have to do anything impressive, but good reviews and promotions are all yours.

Cons

There is no a good communication between management and engineers. I have been on teams where nobody explains what we are supposed to do. They expected us to spontaneously figure it out, and consequently so much time gets wastes. You will not be given to do any interesting work at Raytheon. They are not innovative at all. They take complete algorithms from program A and use in program B. So, there is no real engineering work and you will forget skills gained before joining RMS. Management is way corrupted, so political and unfair to engineers who do real work. They award only individuals who are their friends and whose votes they can count on. After years of engineering experience and so many companies, I can fairly say that Raytheon missile systems is the worst company if you are achievement driven engineer. All managers at RMS are failed engineers. Buddy system provides you good performance reviews although you can do almost nothing. If you are a friend with whoever makes decision, know the decisions will be in your favor. We all knew people who spent half a day at work and charged as full shift which is 9 hours without including breakfast/lunch. Some employees at RMS just go to work to socialize. It is hard to believe but there are so many people that literally do nothing all day long. Retired veterans, who are there to help win contract, do nothing. They just go around and talk to each other. They are so clannish. It is impossible to move from one group to another unless you kiss your boss’ ass every day. But again, if you are a friend with your section head, you can move easily and work on different projects, or join groups/departments that have more money. I was not a buddy with my section head and my requests to move to different group and work on more interesting assignments were not approved although he kept promising. During that time, I witnessed 4 people moving to other departments/groups although they had fewer skills for such jobs in comparing to me. The environment can get so bureaucratic with endless meetings where nothing is decided, just all time changing visions of the upper management are explained over and over. Upper management do not even know that you exist. My department head so far exchanged 2 sentences with me for almost 5 years. Two of his predecessors, neither me nor a bunch of other engineers ever met in person. You will know a bunch of people who do almost nothing, never designed anything and do not want to stick their noses in C++ to figure out something hard. But again, they are friends with the managers. Office space is the smallest I have ever had in any engineering company. Closed are labs are so noisy and ice refrigerated. You have to wear jacket and ear-plugs all the time. You can complain but nobody does anything about. I gave up after a month. Salary raise is 2%. If you are a friend of managers, they will favor you beacause they give promotions to people who would support them politically. In such case, salary raise is 2.2%.

2.0
Nov 24, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Decent pay. - If you like this sort of t thing, 9/80 work schedule (9 days work for 80 hours - work 9 hours per day minimum and get every other Friday off). - Even new grads get a minimum of 3 weeks (120 hours) of PTO, I believe right away, or after the 1st year of employment. - Large company with other Raytheon companies in the family, so there are endless opportunities to move around for different opportunities and even different locations.

Cons

- The first issue is that it is in Tucson. I am an Arizona native, so I am familiar with the whole state, and unfortunately, Tucson stinks. It is run down, dirty, trashy, and just depressing. Don't be fooled by the one or two areas that are nice, which are far from the RMS site, because it is both too far and too expensive, and you still have the rest of Tucson around you. - Now, for RMS...they are terrible about trading or teaching new hires about how things are done there. Many I have spoken to have admitted that this is an issue. They throw you into a program and the company without any guidance and you are expected to just figure it out. No support. Many of the people there have NEVER worked anywhere else (many started there before Raytheon bought Hughes) and they have no ability to imagine that there are better, more effective ways to do things. - Next, they are hiring so fast that they do not have room for people. I had a "lilypad" assigned to me (not a desk, but a corner near a conference room where a person would normally sit to wait for the conference room to clear out before your meeting). This would not be a big deal if it was ANYWHERE near my coworkers or program. I had a lily pad (remember, not a desk) assigned in a different building across the campus from where I was to work with others. This is not something that a few people experience; it is the norm. Almost all new employees will not have a place to work. It took me a full year to get a desk assigned to me in the same building as my colleagues, but not near them, as they were all clustered together but I was off across the building...but at least I was in the same building with a desk assignment. - Affirmative Action is strong with this one. You would expect that at any government contractor, but they are actively looking for ways to promote everyone oth re than white men to leadership positions. They had a meeting in each group to discuss what RMS can do to get more women and People of Color (POC) to apply to and to be given jobs over men and non-POC, defined as non-white. So a Vietnamese person is the same as a Cuban is the same as an African descendant...as long as you are female &/or non-white they are actively looking to move you up. That may be great for you. If you are female or a POC, take advantage of it. It isn't your fault that the door is opened, so go for it. But if this kind of thing bothers you as a principle, then know that it is there. Here is a perfect example of this for you. In my 10 years of being an engineer, I have learned that being a Chief Engineer is a big deal. You have to know your stuff, have lots of experience, and be an expert in your field. Chiefs are often synonymous with being a Fellow. These are technical gurus. I like learning from these Engineers. At RMS, there was a Chief Engineer that I worked directly with that was very young. This Chief was a female POC, and I assumed that she was a super-engineer because she was only about 32. Usually, Chiefs/Fellows have 25-30 years of engineering experience, so meeting someone so young made me think she must be a prodigy. Another engineer started recently that has 10 years experience like myself, and he remembered graduating with her. We were both impressed, until we started working with her. She wasn't any better or worse than anyone else with 10 years experience. Later, we found out the whole story. RMS wants to promote certain individuals over others, so while her pay-grade was th e same as ours, she had the ceremonial title of Chief Engineer with all of the unilateral decision making abilities Chiefs have. She did not have the experience equal to that of a Chief at most any oth we company, and it showed. - PTO stinks because you have no guaranteed vacation time. If you get sick, it comes out of the same bucket as your vacation. - The general climate of the people I worked with is that work and career is paramount while personal or family life is secondary. - Even when the Program Management for the program I worked asked for volunteers to telecommute to free up desk space, not just my "functional" management say no, but almost everyone I knew were told no, no matter what department they worked for. I understand that many of the other Raytheon companies are encouraging telecommuting, but for some reason, RMS is not wanting to accept that paradigm shift. - There are many other cons, but I have already written a book here.

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