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General Motors (GM)

Engaged Employer

Great internal mobility but toxic performance rating culture - Project Manager General Motors (GM) Employee Review

4.0
May 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great employee retention strategy to encourage the employees to seek a new role with a lateral transition or a promotion that may or may not be directly relevant to the past work experience and therefore allows more employees to be well-rounded and flexible in vast skill sets, and these internal moves generally seem a better option to the employees than seeking external opportunities.

Cons

The recent change in the performance rating system that came with the new Chief People Officer is leading to a very toxic environment where the managers are looking for reasons to call out the employees of other groups to give them bad ratings, so their own employees can get good ratings.

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General Motors (GM) Response
1w
Thank you for taking the time to write a thoughtful review! We appreciate hearing about your personal experience and are glad to learn that you enjoy working at GM. Thank you for everything that you do!

Explore other reviews about General Motors (GM)

5.0
May 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Collaborative, welcoming, transparent, work life balance

Cons

I do not have cons at the moment

3.0
May 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

GM offers above-average benefits compared with many employers, including solid healthcare, retirement, and time-off options. Compensation is generally competitive and aligned with market value, especially for engineering and technical roles. The hybrid work schedule at the Tech Center is a positive, offering better flexibility than fully onsite roles while still allowing collaboration with teams in person.

Cons

GM’s current performance management culture can be a major morale killer. The stacked ranking approach and forced distribution create an environment where employees may feel they are competing against peers instead of being evaluated purely on performance. There also appears to be a cap on how many employees within a group can receive higher performance ratings. A manager may tell you throughout the year that you are exceeding expectations, but the final review can still come back as “meets expectations” because of calibration, quotas, or internal politics. Like many large corporations, it can be easy to feel like a small cog in a very large machine. Decision-making is often driven heavily by cost reduction, investor expectations, and headcount efficiency, sometimes at the expense of morale and long-term employee engagement. The “Workplace of Choice” messaging can feel disconnected from the actual employee experience, especially when performance ranking, headcount reduction, and workload expectations do not align with that message.

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