IBM reviews

3.9

78% would recommend to a friend

(107,261 total reviews)
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Arvind Krishna

77% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

IBM has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 107,261 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
2.0
Mar 2, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of online learning available on "Your Learning". Unlimited opportunity to work with multi-cultural teams (virtually, not physically). If you start as a Graduate, the salary is good to begin with. Lots of Women in IT events and lots of LGBT+ support/community. Ability to manage own time is very good - very autonomous IF you get the right project/manager.

Cons

Shocking culture that comes down from the top. Their main focus is on short-term financial success without considering the impact on their workforce or the client. They say "client comes first" but I have never seen IBM encourage this behaviour internally, what they really mean is "bring in the money first, then Client comes second". Financial gain is so important to them that it encouraged to bend accounting rules as much as possible, even if it means a loss in the future - as long as they can get the gain now. Senior management bark down the phone at people and you're made to feel guilty if you can't attend certain calls (on Saturdays...). Employees don't take responsibility for their actions. This is not out of not-wanting to be responsible and own actions, it is out of fear of the repocussions should something go wrong. There is absolutely no movement for progression or promotion (on GTS side, anyway). Yes, it's a good starting salary for a Graduate, however by the end of the 2yr Grad scheme you will be earning less than the market value compared to your non-IBM peers - they say they compare your salary to a PMR aka Market Value, yet this PMR hasn't been updated in years and is different for men vs women. Immediate-management don't have the time to actually support their team in career development, as they have a full-time job to do and being a people manager is just an additional task on the side. Finally, they're off-shoring everything. They have a 60/20/20 vision aka 60% resource far-shore (India), 20% near-shore (Slovakia/Bratislava) and 20% on-shore (UK). Not only do remote colleagues not have the skills to step-into the shoes of those they are replacing in the UK (and by replacement I mean made-redundant), but the cultures don't support each other. In the UK, employees work long-hours until the job is done. In India, colleagues don't know how to think outside of a process or list of instructions for e.g. if something goes wrong and the way around it isn't on the process list then they will just stop and not do anything, they won't even come back and tell you it's not working. You will be constantly chasing them. In east-Europe, if it's 17.01 they go home. So be prepared to have to work double hard to cater for the slack elsewhere. In addition, the IMI service in India is fairly new, about 3yrs old. This means that the colleague skills are way below-par and still being trained. About 70% of my stress was caused by IMI's inability to complete a job. If you want to work for a company that is all about the business and dollar signs, IBM is for you. If you want a great culture, progression and support - find somewhere else. p.s. There's no free tea/coffee - you even have to pay 25p for hot water. Just to show you how low these guys go to save a buck...

1.0
Aug 18, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Having the IBM name on your business card still gets you a seat at the table with many companies, both large and small. The company is truly a global organization, and there are opportunities for international work and assignments if that is something you want for your career - that is assuming that the hiring freeze that has been in place for most of the year is lifted...

Cons

Leadership says one thing, however they do not back up their words with actions. The company baits you in with what they call a reference salary - job seeker beware, this is not the salary you will actually get paid as (in most cases) you will be issued an incentive plan letter AFTER you start and will be told about your comp plan that be anywhere from an 8 to 18% reduction in the reference salary of what you were expecting. What this means is that in the event you ask for an 8% raise over your current salary with your current employer, and they give it to you, when you start, that 8% will actually be null and void as they take that back to incentivize you over and above your agreed upon commissions numbers - it is a bait and switch in my opinion. In addition to the items mentioned above, the company can't decide on a direction, and therefore the are constant reorganizations. Since joining IBM in December, I personally have been a part of three reorganizations where my role has changed. Not only does this impact the customer, but it makes is almost impossible for a sales person or sales manager to succeed as their teams are constantly changing and there is no opportunity to actually build the pipeline necessary to succeed. Lastly, the biggest issue of all (in my opinion) is the morale within the organization is at an all time low. This is due in large part to the items mentioned above, as well as things like IBM increasing your quota half way through the year with no justification, and making you move from a remote employee to an onsite employee, but also you couple that with the fact that IBM has experienced 22 straight quarters of revenue decline and employees wonder why we continue to try and stick this out.

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