Good benefits, terribly managed. - Pipeliner Enbridge Employee Review

2.0
5 Jun 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits are great Good working atmosphere with coworkers Emphasis on safety

Cons

Redundant Policies Corporate bloat Very top heavy organization DEI push is horrendous Heavy McKinsey consulting presence in the company along with blackrock involvement is basically picking the company apart to make it more attractive to shareholders via layoffs used to have a fair incentive program that benefitted good workers, have done away with that this year. they swear up and down that it wont affect people but mathematically that's not true. IT/TIS service is terrible. they could cut it and replace it with AI but it helps their DEI numbers. there is an advancement glass ceiling. credentialism is a huge thing here and even though they claim they hire the best candidate but HR will never take suggestions and good references into account. In many cases they already know who they want to hire for a job and they open the interview process as a formality/CYA case. they structure their pay around the median of what the industry is paying similar positions, yet at the same time claim to want to be an industry leader. their "understanding your compensation" explainer video literally says compensation is based on lowest-common-denominator (but weasel-words their way around it)

Explore other reviews about Enbridge

5.0
9 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good work culture Competitive benefits

Cons

None that I can think of

1.0
15 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great local coworkers who care about their work and support one another. Strong regional culture with many dedicated and capable people. Decent benefits and valuable experience in a large organization. Local teams have continued to perform well through significant change.

Cons

Micromanagement exists across too many levels of the organization, which slows progress and hurts morale. Corporate leadership often feels disconnected from regional teams and does not always communicate changes clearly or effectively. Decisions that impact U.S.-based employees can lack context, transparency, or understanding of local realities. There also appears to be a gap in workplace culture and management style between headquarters and regional operations. While local teams remain strong, broader leadership issues create unnecessary frustration and make it harder for people to do their jobs well.

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