GE Aerospace reviews

4.2

85% would recommend to a friend

(3,391 total reviews)
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Larry Culp

94% approve of CEO

82% positive business outlook

GE Aerospace has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 3,391 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The GE Aerospace employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aeroespacial y defensa industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
1.0
Apr 3, 2020

Most unethical company I had the pleasure of leaving!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Salary (if you negotiate a high salary upon hire) Unlimited vacation if your are salary Work/Life Balance

Cons

The Management is truly awful. HR is not ethical. The OMSBUD's division is as biased and unreliable as the HR persons. The saying, "it's not what you know but who you know" should be the motto, instead of the integrity motto that is tried to depict....because it does not exist. Luckily, I had Sr. Managers who were able to recognize hard work but very few are that fortunate. I was a salary LPB, but unless you are a part of the "click" most people will not move up. Common sense is a rare commodity in the Power division. Retaliation is very real in GE-Power (though it is preached in the handbooks of the zero-tolerance)...it depends on the knowledge and biases ..and don't forget the buddies of the HR/Omsbud. Whistle-blowing for illegal activities that are taking place should be performed but, as mentioned, retaliation is very real so many are afraid to go to 1) their management 2) HR and/or 3) Omsbud because often the employee who attempts to do or say the right thing are the ones who are harrassed at the end. I would highly deter anyone from working for this company unless you are gluten for punishment or ulcers. 7 years was all I could do.

3.0
Nov 1, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Excellent learning-based environment. A lot of the folks on their way out are eager to share their knowledge and make permanent institutional changes with the younger generation. People will seek you out to check up on you, make sure you're doing alright, etc. On top of that, there are formalized trainings led by heads of quality to impart the knowledge you need for this role. -Cross-functional, collaborative role. As a manufacturing engineer, you are exposed to a variety of skills, such as technical (gages, parts, fixtures), financial (cost proposals, quality improvement plans), and leadership (setting priorities for union workers, planners, assistive design engineers, technical experts). -Opportunity. Lynn is in tough shape, and there's always work to be done - you just need the initiative and discipline to execute it. -Visibility. You're regularly interfacing a lot with higher-ups and have a lot of opportunity to ask for help with your problems. -People. I've made some great friends working here.

Cons

I would like to preface this rather lengthy list by saying that I absolutely love working here. THAT SAID, -Way too much on your plate at any given time. Tasks are handed out like candy with no regard as to the length of time it actually takes to complete one. -Work life balance is almost nonexistent. This is a live to work place, not work to live. I would strongly discourage folks with growing families from applying for this role as it stands today. -Difficult to effect change. Projects are often dropped due to hurdles and immediate fires that need to be put out. The technical expert is not available, the specific part having an issue won't be run for a few weeks, another fire arose while you're in the middle of solving your current one, etc. -Too many chiefs. Everyone wants to dole out responsibility, but hardly anyone is interested in executing. Every so often there is a "lean" push with lots of visibility, but the go-forward plan is never implemented because additional resources are needed on the floor to enact change due to the heavy workload on the core team. Design engineers are pulled from their regular roles to assist the manufacturing environment, but they are more interested in questioning everything you do than fixing the problem. -HR communication is limited. I received a cost of living bump that I didn't know about until months later. Professional development and evaluation takes a back seat - I can't remember the last time I had a conversation with my manager about my performance. I imagine this is due to the daily struggle of performing their other work functions. -You're set up to fail. The priorities outlined in your professional development tool do not align with your day-to-day (or even long-term) responsibilities. If they are, they're wildly unrealistic. This makes it difficult to ask for a raise. -Data is extremely difficult/impossible to access. The multitude of tools we have don't give us the data we need. Our workers voucher every time a part is completed. Why do I have to endure a protracted struggle to calculate how much we've shipped in the last three months? Why are our losses metrics not current to the second? Why do I have to look up and calculate this information, when it can just be displayed on a screen in real time, and we have a whole business segment (GE Digital) dedicated to making this happen? -Maintenance is its own separate department, which is good, but you need to know exactly what's going on in your machines and that information is not visible to all. -Difficult to stay in your new role after transitioning. Turnover will ensure you're called back into the role you came from, essentially stuck where you started.

1.0
May 21, 2019

Heartless

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good benefits while you're there.

Cons

Since they went to the two-tier pay system, they look for any excuse to get rid of the older, better paid employees, without regard as to how it will ruin their lives. Why do you think you see billboards in Wilmington advertising for new hires? They are trying to get new, inexperienced employees at a cheaper rate!

Viewing 67 - 69 of 3,391 Reviews

Glassdoor has 4,692 GE Aerospace reviews submitted anonymously by GE Aerospace employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if GE Aerospace is right for you.