IBM reviews

3.9

78% would recommend to a friend

(107,230 total reviews)
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Arvind Krishna

76% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

IBM has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 107,230 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The IBM employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Tecnologías de la información industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

107K reviews
3.0
May 1, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Decent benefits relatively speaking - Interesting and skilled colleagues - Occasional travel can be fun (as long as you don't get a long weekly commute that lasts more than a year)

Cons

- Your prospects rise and fall with your industry and practice area - Compartmentalization (oftentimes hard to try something new or get on a project of interest) For the most part I agree with many of the reviews of IBM and other large consultancies on this site, which is that it's a body shop first and foremost and depending on your industry, skillset, and practice area, you either have a decent experience for a few years or find yourself feeling very limited in assignment opportunities. It all ebbs and flows with the times and business conditions. For practitioners (i.e., consultants), your livelihood is largely dependent upon 1) the ability of Partners and those doing sales / proposal work to win business in your area and 2) being politically savy enough to have someone above you look out for your career. Oftentimes you have no control over either of the above which is what can make the experience extremely frustrating at times. I see two major problems with IBM's path forward in the States. First, it seems that every few years there's a decision to strategically enter a new business line in an effort to increase their footprint, which oftentimes ends badly. A few years ago IBM built up a Strategy and Change practice only to let many of these people go when the business didn't come trickling in. I fear this will be the same story with the company's new push in the direction of data analytics as well. Being a large company, the potential client field is pretty narrow and limited to other large organizations willing to negotiate a multi-million dollar service contract. The smaller, more boutique consultancies eat them for lunch with small and mid-size clients as they're able to offer far more competitive pricing and specialization. Government contracts aside, there's just not a ton of contracts they can earnestly compete for. Secondly, IBM has struggled to become a true consultancy and remains an IT solutions / systems integration firm at its core. The best opportunities are still longer term ERP projects or those where IBM has a long-standing relationship and maintenance contract in place. Without these, the whole GBS division wouldn't be sustainable. It is simply too difficult for a practitioner to survive and thrive on smaller, short-term contracts because you risk ending up on the bench for periods of time - all things that count against you. And if your practice isn't winning work for you to be staffed on, consider it warning of a gathering storm. In general, it's not hard to read the tea leaves. All of the company's growth is overseas in emerging markets and sales targets being assigned to most industries are completely unrealistic. From my view, this is only setting the stage for further workforce reduction plans so I think it's unwise for anyone to consider IBM as anything more than a stopover of 3-5 years in their career at most. If you get in at a good time when your particular industry or practice-area is doing well, you could have a few good years and work with some great colleagues. However, it's always a good idea to keep your eye on the business pipeline because when it slows down you should start plotting your exit.

2.0
Apr 9, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexibility - work from home,work from any IBM location.provide laptops to everybody Brand name - has its value

Cons

- You will be working for the IBM JDK.But your work will be mostly restricted to defects. - Your life is dependent on your - TL and Manager.Its mostly the manager though the opinion of TL counts to a very less extent.Some useless managers and TL's will screw your life. - Promotion is a rarity - only on a need basis you are promoted. - Performance judging is biased.Only people with rating 1 and 2+ who perform consistenly are promoted.People who get a rating 2 once might even get a 3 rating but not a 2+ - Work only in Core Java and C.That too you will work only on defects in the name of development.There are no trainings or anything given here.From day 1 you will be asked to work on defects.You will not get any deep understanding of any topic.Everyday you will be working on a different defect.Most of the work involves taking the sun code and porting.Work in JDK will be here till the end of this year.After that there is no clearcut picture of what you have in scope. - Not be using any J2EE related technologies or even databases ( as you are working for the JDK).Big minus as the outside market works a lot on J2EE. - More stress is there on Patents and IP. - Salaries are pathetic.Only Band 7B and Band 8 guys get a good salary.For Band 6A,6B and 7A salaries are pathetic. - No reimbursement of Broadband expenses - No free tea or coffee. -

2.0
Mar 19, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great technical resources available - Opportunity to learn new skills (assuming you get the time) - Ability to work from home - Some great people / colleagues

Cons

- Upper management does not care about anything but profits - Constant restructuring putting you in places you don't want to be. If you like your current role, don't get used to it, because you'll eventually be forced in to another role you don't really want - After almost 4 years of employment, I received no raises even though I was a top performer each year - In constant fear of layoffs. I lost many good friends over the span of numerous resource actions. Some of these people were excellent and highly technically skilled, however they didn't play the politics game as well as the people who were kept. - IBM cares more about the process than the people

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