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Bridgestone Americas

Engaged Employer

Chaos - Design Engineer Bridgestone Americas Employee Review

1.0
Aug 3, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good pay - Hybrid work - Location

Cons

You will BURNOUT. It’s just about how much you can last before you do!!! 1- Chaotic product development process. - Design review meetings are something worse than shark tank. You get attacked by a swarm of questions not leaving room to even finish your presentation. - Even if you follow your design checklist items, you are still met with unrealistic “what-if” scenarios from peers, and management not defending against such scenarios. - You are asked to pass a design review for a design that is not complete. Not getting approval results in disciplinary action, even when you have communicated in writing your progress over time. - Assigns less engineers per project compared to what is quoted. For example, a project requires 3 engineers, they quote 3 but employ 2 which leaves engineers super loaded all the time (NO downtime). - Your working capacity is spread over many projects, for example, a New Product Introduction of 25+ components on one major program, and 3 to 4 running design changes on 2-3 other in-production programs. - If you are assigned an EV program, your lead-time is cut in half on top of everything stated above. 2- Chaotic change management process. - Poor change management board decisions. - Lacks oversight and accepts customer requests even when the team has been already over loaded. - Lack of cross-functional collaboration yielding poor decisions and monetary losses. - Team DOES NOT MEET for new RFQs to properly assess whether the company can actually deliver on time. The customer asks for a design change in the weekly meeting and assumes we can do it without the PM actually making a timeline and responding back. 3- Chaotic project management conduct. - PM does not maintain the project’s timeline. - You are left guessing how to prioritize your tasks. - You are judged by leadership for guessing wrong. - PM not supporting even when the project is falling behind. - PM assigned many programs, they hate their jobs as they vocalized it to me. 4- Everyone is overloaded. You can’t get anything done without needing to request priority. By overloaded, people are constantly frustrated which yields constant escalations across the organization and often being in uncomfortable positions. 5- You never leave home feeling accomplished. Looming fear over the mountain of tasks waiting for you tomorrow. 6- Engineering management will ask you (the junior engineer) to do their job, for example, contact stakeholders across the organization, including the Engineering VP, and ask them what are their top 3 priority items, then put them all on one sheet and come to him (your manager) with the top 3. That is supposed to be their job. 7- Engineering management decisions and directions constantly changing leaving the engineers not sure about how to conduct business. Lack of standardization.

Explore other reviews about Bridgestone Americas

5.0
May 31, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It a pretty good job I love working at bridgestone it have taught me alot I appreciate it

Cons

I really don't have any cons it's a good job a good paying job as well

3.0
May 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay for the location. Established business in the area (over 50 years running), probably not going anywhere for a while. As long as you show up, do your work, and don't violate safety rules, you have job security. Rotating schedule allows for a lot of time off (unless you're drafted).

Cons

The environment can be very uncomfortable in some areas due to lack of climate controls. Constant back and forth between "the way it's always been done" and "let's try something new." Rotating schedule can be harsh. Sometimes it's hard to know who is in charge of something, as people get moved around a lot. Draft can eat into your time off, especially if your area is shorthanded. Communication from corporate seems to hit a wall before it reaches the technicians and operators; changes planned for years will seem abrupt to the people on the floor.

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