Good. Slow and steady wins the race. - Avis employé Employé (anonyme) RTX

3,0
13 déc. 2013
Employé (anonyme)
Recommande
Approbation du PDG
Perspective commerciale

Avantages

Raytheon is the typical big company. Lots of bureaucracy. You'll know whether you're on the fast track within 3 or 4 years. But as an engineer it offers interesting work and being a big company there is opportunity to move around. As an engineer, if I get interesting work that engrosses me and makes the day fly by, and I get paid a decent salary, I can't complain. Benefits are good although they have been changing the medical insurance options which seem to be getting more expensive and cover less. This is probably happening at many companies. Flexible work schedule. The extent of the flexibility varies depending upon your manager and your work in particular. In my experience it is easy to flex a handful of hours here and there, and no one bothers you if you make them up within a 2 week window. Also they allow the option of a "9/80 work schedule" which means you work 9 hour days and get every other friday off. After 5 years you get 4 weeks of vacation/sicktime (all one bucket). After 15 years you get 5 weeks which is the max. Some people are grandfathered in with more time off, but they are the older folks. They offered a pension up until about 2005. I know it's not useful for new employees but I figured I'd mention it (the pension is calculated as 1.8%/year for the first 20 years and then 1.2%/year every year thereafter. That final percentage of your salary when you retire is the benefit). For 401k, they match up to 4% of your salary.

Inconvénients

Hard to get promotions. In engineering they have 6 levels, and then two engineering fellow salary grades. So I will admit there aren't a ton of rungs here. However, even if you perform well, they are very stingy with the promotions. They only like to see certain %(low) of people move up in a given timeframe. The first 3 or 4 grades will go fast. Then it slows down. There are also management tracks which become less technical the higher up you go. More like managing people and department resources. Then there are tracks for Program management. In my experience, the frustrating thing to see on your review is that you're "promotable" and then not actually get the promotion. The designation seems to hold little meaning. They are also a fan of carrot dangling. The "do this additional thing" or "wait til next cycle" is a common response. I'm not a huge fan of the review process in general. There is a large disconnect between the people who decide the rankings / raises / promotions and the project management. Also the performance review timeline is crazy. You tell line management who your technical leads have been and divide up the time you spent working on the tasks with those leads. Usually you report this in November. Typically this is 2-4 people. Then the line management asks those people for a review of your work. Typically a paragraph or so. Then the requesting folks who haven't spent more than 10 hours with you all year are sitting in a room ranking the people in that dept within each level (ranked against your peers). These rankings determine raises and promotions. If you are top 10% you will probably get 1-3% over someone in the middle and you may get a promotion. In my experience the typical raise is 3-4% and a promotion is typically worth another 3-4%. To get back to the time line, I have been told the ranking are determined by the end of the year. Sometimes before a required final self assessment and report on your year. They ask for this but it appears it is more for documentation and has little, if any influence on rankings b/c they have already been done. Then sometime in January the raise budget is decided per department and the dept manager and the 5 or 6 section managers below him must divide up the budget guided by the rankings. Then in April you get your previous year performance review from your section manager with a summary which is often recycled stuff you or your technical manager wrote. It'll say M = meets expectations, E = exceeds expectations or FE = far exceeds expectations. It may also have a designation P for promotable. Here is the stupifying thing. At that moment you can have a great review with tons of positive feedback. Then about 3 weeks later at the beginning of May you get a raise notice (effective the first paycheck in May) which tells you the bottom line % increase all this BS has been leading up to. At this point it's too late to do anything. Management is very inflexible on disputes and making any "corrections". Then about a month later you have your mid year review for the current year and the horrible cycle continues. Why must this be so drawn out? And why do people who have no clue what is being done on a daily basis wield so much power over something as important as this? By the time you actually get feedback on the previous year, we are a solid 4 months into the new year. That is so dumb. I have no idea why the review cycle must be so extended. Plus if you want to dispute something, or make a case for yourself, time has passed, no one remembers details, and management claims there is nothing they can do. It's typically a "wait 'til next year" scenario. Not good. I'll tell you this. If it weren't for the pension, I'd leave. But as the title says, slow and steady wins the race.

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5,0
6 janv. 2026
Recommande
Approbation du PDG
Perspective commerciale

Avantages

Good pay overseas assignment opportunities recognizable organization straight forward application process if you were good at your job in the Army great benefits

Inconvénients

work culture is EXTREMELY contract dependent ( hit or miss) can hit a brick wall as far as career progression (on low-turnover overseas contracts)

5,0
29 janv. 2016
Recommande
Approbation du PDG
Perspective commerciale

Avantages

J'ai travaillé chez Raytheon pendant plus de 4 ans et j'ai eu une excellente expérience. L'entreprise m'a offert de nombreuses opportunités d'apprentissage et de croissance. J'ai été promu deux fois au cours de mon mandat dans l'entreprise et mes responsabilités ont considérablement augmenté. J'ai eu l'impression que ma direction me soutenait et m'offrait le mentorat professionnel que je recherchais. Je me suis sentie autonome et respectée pendant mon séjour là-bas.

Inconvénients

Il peut être difficile de travailler dans une entreprise de défense de cette envergure en raison de tous les processus et de la bureaucratie. Les choses peuvent évoluer lentement, il faut être patient et choisir ses batailles. Cela étant dit, si vous apprenez à travailler au sein du système, vous pouvez avoir un impact significatif ici !

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