Be aware - Anonymous employee OTIS Employee Review

1.0
28 Jul 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Many good people (in non executive roles). Good pay and decent benefits. Recognizable global brand with a long-standing legacy

Cons

Executive leadership is stuck in an outdated UTC-era mindset — closed-door decisions, no transparency, and no clear long-term vision. After January 2025, the company quietly sidelined its publicly promoted values and culture programs. What was once emphasized is now optional or abandoned. Incredibly diloed organizational structure that discourages cross-functional collaboration and innovation. Digital, AI, and data analytics efforts are poorly executed, due to a lack of modern tools, fragmented systems, and no integration across programs. Systems don’t talk to each other, making basic analytics and automation unnecessarily difficult. Investment in product innovation and AI lags behind competitors, and there’s limited urgency to modernize. Culture feels stuck in the past. Leadeeshop doesn't seem to understand that historical success doesn’t guarantee future relevance. Employee feedback isn’t considered, and most people are treated as headcount unless they’re part of an internal favorites list. Even the most mundane program or project decisions often require multiple rounds of approval from individuals with no understanding of the subject matter, slowing progress and demoralizing teams. Employees are not empowered.

Explore other reviews about OTIS

5.0
12 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Real team work oriented. Feels very much being part of the company

Cons

Needs juggling multiple jobs! A lot of travel involved. But great learning opportunities follow these.

1
1.0
6 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Otis is a well-known company with a strong brand name, established customers, and exposure to major commercial accounts. The role gives you real responsibility quickly, especially if you are managing a service territory with active customer issues, contract renewals, and operational escalations. The experience can build strong skills in account management, customer retention, field coordination, problem solving, and handling high-pressure customer situations. You get direct exposure to customers, technicians, operations, and leadership, which can be valuable if you want to grow in service, sales, or facilities-related industries

Cons

The biggest issue is poor management. The branch has serious operational problems, but leadership does not seem to have a clear plan to fix them. Instead, the pressure gets pushed down to the account manager, who ends up dealing with angry customers, unresolved service issues, delayed communication, and internal problems they do not fully control. Management needs to take more ownership of the environment they are putting employees into. New hires should not be expected to clean up long-standing territory issues without proper training, realistic timelines, and real support. There is a big difference between holding people accountable and blaming them for problems that were already there. The leadership style feels reactive instead of organized. Problems are addressed after they become urgent, communication is inconsistent, and expectations can feel disconnected from what is actually happening in the field. This creates unnecessary pressure on employees and makes it harder to rebuild trust with customers. The role would be much more manageable if management provided stronger onboarding, clearer priorities, better internal coordination, and more realistic expectations. Without that, employees can end up stuck between frustrated customers and a leadership team that does not provide enough support to actually solve the root issues.

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