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Matrix Technologies, Inc.

Engaged employer

If you want a promotion, make sure to let your supervisor know you are expecting it 2 years out. It takes that long! - Engineering Matrix Technologies, Inc. Employee Review

3.0
16 Oct 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Very diverse projects, employee appreciation, bonus, good people overall, and very intelligent people to work with.

Cons

Takes forever to get a promotion when you really deserve it and supervisors are very busy due to lots of work so you hardly get to talk to them or see them.

Explore other reviews about Matrix Technologies, Inc.

5.0
8 May 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The managers in the IS department at the Denver office are the best I've ever had the pleasure of working with. They come to work everyday with a positive attitude and support their employees the best they can in furthering education, troubleshooting issues at client sites, and work- life balance. They are extremely involved with their employees. The company offers great benefits

Cons

I have no issues with the company

1
3.0
11 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company offers some strong employee-focused benefits, including an ESOP plan and 401(k) matching. The employee ownership structure is a meaningful benefit and can create a sense of shared investment in the company’s success. The 401(k) match is also a solid advantage and shows that the company does provide tangible long-term financial benefits for employees.

Cons

Companies can talk a lot about culture, values, and fundamentals. But the real test is whether those standards are applied consistently. When accountability depends on who you are, who you know, or how inconvenient the issue is, the culture starts to ring hollow. That matters even more when growth is stagnant or retracting. At some point, a company has to be honest about whether its strategy is designed to create real growth or simply preserve the current operating model. There is often a divide between growth strategies. One path challenges assumptions, sharpens focus, and forces uncomfortable change. The other gets branded as growth but mostly maintains the status quo. Values are not proven by how often they are repeated. They are proven by what leadership is willing to confront.

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