Applied Materials reviews

3.9

78% would recommend to a friend

(4,558 total reviews)
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Gary Dickerson

86% approve of CEO

73% positive business outlook

Applied Materials has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 4,558 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Applied Materials employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufactura industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
1.0
Apr 28, 2020

Don't come!

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

new grad can easily find a spot here.

Cons

a lot of uncultivated and foolish people in high level management don't respect engineers. actually 24*7 job and will push you until you leave.

1.0
Nov 16, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-The company's been around for decades, which makes it stable -Hours are flexible -Looking around, they seem fairly egalitarian on hiring -- people hail from all nationalities, and the general age range is 45-65

Cons

-Another way to look at the previous point is that no young or ambitious people want to work here (also note that the gender ratio is 4M:1F) -People seem accepting of low-quality work -Parking's a daily struggle, the cafeteria food is mediocre, the culture is blah, and they don't even provide Wi-Fi -I met several people who routinely got stuck working 60-hour weeks (including weekends) -The company seems to be on shaky financial ground, leading to 4-5 mandatory weekly shutdowns every year -Applied seems set on employing just enough people to get by (complaints about understaffing are rampant), and paying them well below market. They're also happy to exploit gross inequities -- how else to explain two workers with identical titles & start dates being $30,000 apart on salary? But I'm mostly leaving this review to warn about working here as a technical writer (especially in the "Front End Products" group), which comes with a list of cons all its own. Contrary to everything they say in both the job description and interview, what they offer is not "technical writing" by any stretch of the imagination. All documents at Applied are essentially pre-written, since they all follow a rigid boilerplate format that can't be modified, even though absolutely everyone (both inside and outside the company) agrees that they read like crap. I'm guessing they feel the need to inflate titles and mislead people because if they were honest about the actual nature of the job, no one would take it. For the first few months, I spent most of my days doing one thing: copying & pasting every word of text from one document into another, one paragraph at a time (necessary because things don't transfer smoothly into Microsoft Word). This involved pausing after every paragraph to clean up line breaks & special characters, reformat numbered lists, manually re-type entire data charts, etc. -- all brainless, tedious drudgery that any child could do (and would be bored by). It's no wonder my coworker quit within the first month. I hung around in the hopes that it would turn into a real job, but things actually got worse. At some point, my daily duties abruptly switched to taking documents and trying to identify all the engineering specifications that were wrong or missing (as if I had any ability to tell). This basically came down to going around the office to harass various engineers with questions like "can you tell me what numbers go in this data table??" Thus I'd gone from being a janitor to being a secretary. More specifically, a secretary in a foreign language (the technical & in-house jargon can be indecipherable), talking to people who often try to avoid talking to you, skip meetings, and speak very limited English. Not helping the situation was getting stuck with a dishonest, disrespectul manager who's prone to hotheaded outbursts and insulting people in public meetings. He's also prone to leading employees on to believe their job is secure, then disposing of them with a same-day layoff. At one point, he actually admitted that the job has nothing to do with technical writing... yet a few days later, I saw a fresh listing on LinkedIn with the same title & description as before, ready to hook the next unsuspecting sucker. Which confirmed my suspicion that the deception was intentional. Applied Materials is a big place, so your mileage may vary. But for what it's worth, this is the most negative and disappointing job experience I've had in many years.

1.0
Nov 11, 2017

Applies only to DSM aka dep group

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good coworkers Getting fit standing on metal floors for 10 hours at stretch and carrying heavy parts from one building to another after doing a Masters or PhD

Cons

Highly political organization with an attrition rate of 30 percent /will provide counter offers and then not keep promises / h1b and green card holders should avoid this division /most of the work can be done by a high school student but they hire mostly Masters and PhDS/ work is long but mundane and super easy basically you are a glorified technician/you will essentially learn nothing outside the niche area/have now started giving promotions to all and sundry in an effort to keep the few remaining people with three years experience

Viewing 22 - 24 of 4,558 Reviews

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