Great employer to add to your resume as a Fresh Graduate, but it does come with a steep price. - Applications Developer IBM Employee Review

3.0
13 Aug 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The individuals at the company are quite knowledgeable given that they have been at the company for a long amount of time. You get access to the large library of technical information in variety of fields.

Cons

I have been with the company for a little over one year and I will tell exactly what I have went through. In title I said that it comes with a steep price, turns out I am not even making one fourth of what my client is being billed for hourly. My annual salary is 40k and IBM kind of knows that fresh graduates will fall for it, so they low ball you. Second I am an individual who cannot sit steady and I like to keep progressing and learning new things, IBM is not the place if you are expecting to progress/develop your career. You are treated as a disposable asset, where if one leaves another takes their place. I like to take on challenges, but after a couple months the work gets stale as there is nothing challenging about it and its more like a daily chore where you don't get to learn much or you get placed on a project where the team lead has no idea what is going on, believe me I have been through both scenarios. After a year, I really think that rather then being able to progress on my career path it went backwards. You may ask why stay if I hate it? Well I am not here for long, only until the end of Dec 2014 and then I am out. :)

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5.0
27 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Investing in the right areas.

Cons

The got rid of 401k match for “pension”.

4.0
26 Aug 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Disclaimer: A lot of what I'm writing below of course depends on the work area and management chain. But I found this to be fairly pervasive policies in IBM in my 9+ years with the company. 1. IBM's policies and management are very flexible when it comes to working remotely or accommodating various life situations (sick days, doctor visits, etc.). Management is encouraged to measure an employee by their work and impact, and not by hours spent at their office. 2. Great colleagues! Though unfortunately, many have been leaving due to the instability of IBM's HW development business. 3. At least in my area, there's a high level of flexibility on which projects should I undertake based on my and my management assessment of business impact.

Cons

1. Unfortunately, IBM still uses the "normal distribution" rating system, where at the end of the year each employee is ranked as a top contributor (5%), above average contributor (15%), average contributor (~75%), and bottom contributor (5%). This curve is difficult to apply in the R&D world, where you may have many members of the team working long and hard hours, and end up being "average contributors" at the end of the year, because there just isn't room for all to be top contributors. 2. The above may not be so disturbing, if only IBM didn't practically cancelled all raises, performance bonuses and incentive for the non top-performers. I've had a consistent "above average" rating in the last 4-5 years, and my raise and performance bonus were ridiculous mere 1.5-2% of my salary. Were I rated "average contributor" I would have gotten NOTHING. So you can imagine that people can go year after year without any raise to their salary. From talking to manager friend, this is IBM's way to eliminate the non-top-performers without having to fire them, as part of its direction of reducing US manpower. 3. Hiring freeze in many areas - again, as part of IBM's attempt to reduce its workforce across North America and Europe we see many jobs move to the India and Far East markets. This is of course upsetting to see local teams shrink and disappear, especially when many great local IBM colleagues and experts begin to drop out. From my experience thus far working with India SW teams - they are still very far away from the standards I would have expected from US and Europe based teams. 4. Poor top down communication about company's and divisions' future. Employees learn from rumors and news websites what's about to come...

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IBM Response
10y
Thanks for sharing your experience, and we're glad that you've had a positive experience working with talented colleagues and taking advantage of IBM's programs. IBM is in the midst of a major transformation, --our Systems business is going through its own changes to strengthen competitiveness. Change is never easy. As part of our transformation, we just launched a whole new approach for how we are coaching employees, delivering feedback and managing reviews. No distribution guidelines or what some think of as 'stacked rankings." What's particularly great is that this was co-designed with our employee base from all over the world... to the tune of hundreds of thousands of page views, comments, on-line debates and discussions. IBMers even named the new system Checkpoint, to reflect the regular feedback rituals we're adopting. Managers are more empowered with the new methodology to help them acknowledge the great work of their teams and help their employees develop professionally. These steps and more are showing up in our employee surveys as well. So IBMers are feeling the change. We are confident these changes will help us in continuing to attract and retain great talent.
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