ENGEO Reviews

3.9

74% would recommend to a friend

(60 total reviews)

Uri Eliahu

97% approve of CEO

75% positive business outlook

ENGEO has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 60 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ENGEO employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Management and consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

60 reviews
1.0
30 Oct 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-“The Servant Leader” by Ken Blanchard -Smart, effective staff and hard-working field reps

Cons

-The overarching problem at ENGEO is groupthink in management. Groupthink is a significant step beyond typical irrational human decision-making; it is when a group makes non-optimal decisions because members of the group are more driven by the need to conform to the group than to conform to rational thinking. Frequently, groupthink will prevent reasonable solutions from even being considered at all, if leaving those ideas off the table helps the cohesiveness of the group. It is more common when a group is centered around a strong personality, like the executive committee is centered around the president of ENGEO. Groupthink leads otherwise intelligent, ethical people to make decisions that conflict with reason and/or moral values to advance the group cause. With groupthink, an “in” and an “out” group will develop, and the “in” group starts to become the “us” that must beat the “out/them” group. In ENGEO’s case, management has made a “them” group that includes members of their own staff for no good reason, as I explain in the following section. -The management and HR culture unnecessarily excludes many excellent team members who are passionate about helping the group. They seem to be particularly bad at working with more introverted people; yet so many intelligent, introverted people at ENGEO kick butt at their jobs everyday despite no support from management, or support so poor it is a hindrance! So many introverted people I knew there were some of the most productive and most helpful people on staff and were obviously integral to ENGEO’s success. Yet management routinely passes over introverted people for promotions, raises, and opportunities, and then tells people they need to be fundamentally different human beings to be successful! The result is that management ends up negating the intrinsic value of AT LEAST a third of the staff, fails to get the most from their potential, and breed stress, tension, and misery. This is a failure of management that harms the company’s morale and productivity, but much more importantly, harms real human beings that don’t deserve it. -ENGEO is a heavily undisciplined work environment when it comes to systems that make groups work efficiently within and between each other. (Most individuals use a lot of discipline to do their jobs, the company would fall apart in a week if people didn’t, but the structures between people and information are usually either barebones, ad-hoc, or non-existent.) I have worked at companies less than half this size that have actual rigorous systems for defining problems, understanding systems, improving processes, and measuring how changes generate a return on investment. Not at ENGEO! You’ll get a principal asking how something is going, an email will get sent and ignored for a few weeks; a follow-up email will generate an enthusiastic but noncommittal reply a few days after that, and then nothing will happen! Wash, rinse, repeat...meanwhile people waste their productivity everyday doing things that could and should have been more streamlined years ago, and the entire company loses out financially due to it. I and others pushed hard to make real positive change at ENGEO, heavily encouraged by field staff who had to work with our procedures and data management systems literally in the trenches. But so little meaningful support came through from management (including, but not limited to, clear decision-making and delegation of authority) that real improvement was impossible. Thanks to the groupthink and the lack of effective procedures to identify good ideas and carry them to implementation, management ends up preventing most of the innovations and improvements that would really help the company turn itself around and go to the next level. -Compensation. ENGEO started me as an entry-level MS staff engineering position, with associated pay. Using the ASCE 2018 salary calculator, I determined that for this region I started at approximately 30% of median salary for an entry-level engineer back in 2015 and received what amounted to cost of living changes in the 3+ years I was there. However, I also changed title and achieved professional licensure in that time. According to ASCE, my value, even kept at that same 30% of median salary level, should have increased 35-40% in those 3 years. But I got 10% in that time! I had been vocally concerned with management about how my salary would change through the title change and licensure, and management assured me I had nothing to worry about and would be fairly compensated. In hindsight, they just lied to my face! PTO is also low, and while they will tout their ESOP plan, it only gets you up to median salaries for this industry and it takes 6 years to vest, so compensation here really is not a good deal, especially if you are someone who develops fast. At ENGEO, your compensation probably won’t start high and is unlikely to keep up with your value.

3.0
29 Jun 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

ENGEO cares about the jobs they’re a part of and rewards those PM’s

Cons

ENGEO claims to have an open door policy but that isn’t an accurate representation of the company’s view on important employee communication. The open door policy is for appearances and just means that the company doesn’t have doors on their hinges it doesn’t mean that there is open communication or any reasonable level of transparency. Many important meetings with EXCOM, CSMs, and upper management are held in secrecy where they find out how they can take advantage of lower level employees. The company doesn’t like to hear from people unless they have the same opinion as upper management. They generally don’t care for dispensable employees that want to have a long career here and it is more evident each year. The company seems to look down on individuals who speak up and want to discuss important topics openly. There is a fear of retaliation and many employees don’t speak up because they fear that they will be labeled as a problem employee and be at a disadvantage for the next set of raises/bonuses. That is why I have to say this here. ENGEO delayed wage reviews for almost 3 months and saved a lot of money by not giving employees a wage increase at the normal time. When the wage review finally happened, they gave a lot of staff very poor raises and have said they may make up for it with bonuses at the end of the year which is not guaranteed and taxed at a higher rate. They gave a lot of excuses as to why raises were so poor this year, COVID-19 being one of them (construction inspection/exploration has for the most part been untouched due to covid) but consistently post weekly/monthly progress reports that read record numbers above last year, our most profitable year; “amaazzzing, b000m, Wowzers, take that covid”. In the end, ENGEO doesn’t care about the well being of dispensable staff looking to have a long career here. ENGEO is full of double standards and when management had the opportunity to stay home utilizing their COVID and FMLA hours for any reason they saw fit, they did. All the while, lab and field staff were asked to continue work without any sort of wage increase that other essential workers saw. Some offices are more profitable than others but this is not taken into account when wage reviews are discussed. Everyone who is below management/servant leader role has been hurt by ENGEO’s (upper management) selfishness. They say that we can speak up, and we are an employee owned company, but we can’t speak up because we fear that repercussions and negative actions will be taken against us. No one is on the same page. Perhaps it would be better if wages were reviewed per office by the management in charge of that office and separate funds for salary were set aside for each office. That way offices that meet goals or excel get wage increases and bonuses that reflect that performance as opposed to sharing across all offices and getting dragged through the over optimum soil. But if this idea was taken through LIFT it would be taken down and the employee would be ridiculed.

avatar
ENGEO Response
5y
First, we’d like to let you know that Uri (CEO) has read this as well and would love to have a conversation with you to discuss your experiences. If you give him a call directly, he has promised that your identity will remain confidential. We’d like to apologize that you have had such a negative experience and that you felt uncomfortable discussing these thoughts openly with anyone here. Our open-door policy is intended to encourage people to share ideas and provide constructive criticism without the fear of retribution. We also have anonymous surveys, such as the Great Place to Work survey we had in May 2020. ENGEO strives to be transparent through our monthly, company-wide strategy meetings where we discuss “family business,” including details about projects, staffing, internal initiatives, and finances. Since COVID, we have been holding these meetings weekly. Anyone can add topics to these meetings and can present new ideas during our Executive Committee (EXCOM) meetings. Of course, there is a level of confidentiality in some EXCOM meetings which is designed to protect individual employees. For example, if conversation about wages, bonuses, and performance were shared, working relationships could be impacted. No employee or position at ENGEO is considered dispensable. In our rigorous recruiting process, we look for top-notch candidates who want a career at ENGEO, and who we would be proud to work alongside. Our inverted pyramid company structure, servant leadership, benefits packages, events, goal planning (APS), training, and more are all geared to helping employees feel supported for long-term success. We have implemented many precautions and protocols to keep employees safe during this time (masks, gloves, social distancing, virtualizing/delaying in-person trainings, etc.). If you were made to feel dispensable by any coworker or client please reach out to HR so that we can rectify the issue. ENGEO is very lucky to be persevering when many in our space are struggling and laying off employees. The wage review was delayed for a variety of reasons. Among them, the AEC consulting sales cycle (from sending proposals to completing work and getting paid by the client) is a long process. Naturally, we wouldn’t know how much COVID is impacting business without giving it more time, even now. We measure impact by looking at statistics other than monthly invoicing reports, such as the book to bill ratio. Although some may feel that bonuses/raises were too small, every single principal, director, and associate agreed to skip receiving a raise or bonus during the wage review to help preserve our financial strength and keep our employees. The amount of work brought in by an individual is among many factors considered during wage review. The idea of dividing pay by office may go against the collaborative, “ONEGEO” culture we strive to create. As we are all part owners of ENGEO, and not part owners of the individual office we work for, we can all celebrate successes and weather the lows. That said, you are more than welcome to present this idea. It would not be ridiculed, but considered and discussed. ENGEO provides resources and avenues for people to speak up because continuous learning/improvement is a big part of our culture. We understand that people can feel intimidated or fearful when giving negative feedback or voicing an unpopular opinion. This is why we have anonymous surveys and performance reviews. However, if you have ideas for actions we could take to improve, the best way for us to understand your experience is through open conversation. Although voicing your opinion here on Glassdoor probably helped release frustration, it is not the best method for creating the change you’re looking for. Generally speaking, those who speak out to genuinely improve ENGEO are those that build a lasting career here. I hope that this response has helped you feel like you can reach out and speak openly. You can also contact your HR team any time, we are here to help. Sincerely, Your HR Team
1.0
2 Oct 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Friendly, middle of road environment.

Cons

Construction related and field related work is always prone to risks - too bad they are not likely to have your back (literally) the day it finally happens to you. So remember not to get injured or get into a major medical problem. As soon as they find out here's what'll happen: you'll likely be thrown overboard from their ship into the big ocean and from afar they'll shout a friendly but completely meaningless send-off: "remember, with us, you'll always be family !".

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Glassdoor has 75 ENGEO reviews submitted anonymously by ENGEO employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if ENGEO is right for you.