IGT reviews

3.4

63% would recommend to a friend

(2,033 total reviews)

Nick Khin

52% approve of CEO

50% positive business outlook

IGT has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 2,033 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The IGT employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Artes y entretenimiento industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
Jun 13, 2014

Get out while you can

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The compensation is pretty good. I suppose there are or will be lots of opportunities opening up because everyone is leaving or getting let go.

Cons

From the top down, there seems to be a lack of understanding of how to turn things around and get this place back on track. It feels like a mad scramble, grasping at straws, in an attempt to hold market share.

1.0
Mar 17, 2014

Dreadful -- This Company Simply Doesn't Care (and it shows)

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I am able to educate my peers and director, which teaches them how they should be conducting their jobs. Most do not know how to write a proper sentence.

Cons

Absolutely dreadful workplace environment! The Company does not value employees and is terrible at evaluating talent. They simply do not care -- you are just a number at IGT -- there is no concern about employee morale, development or growth. The CEO just cares about her fancy airplane (which she forgets is the company's .. not her personal limousine). You can work here for years and years without ever seeing the CEO or most C-levels. They dont care about the workforce and are disinterested in the gambling industry (and decisions flow accordingly). Curmudgeons and dolts abound in my department unfortunately. I do not recommend this company.

2.0
Jan 29, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Employees and benefits. The rank and file is the only thing that keeps the company going. They are a great bunch. The benefits are top notch, which helps to retain great employees.

Cons

Executive management, merit increases (or lack thereof), and interdepartmental politics. Executive management - they are in it for themselves. They are all about the corporate jet and off-site meetings at resort locations. Patti Hart needs to leave - that's the only thing that will boost company morale. She takes credit for the stock price doubling or at one time, tripling, since she was brought in by the board. Well here's the fact, she came end right at the absolute dead bottom of the stock market crash in 2009 when IGT was trading for $7 and change. The "dead cat" bounce from $7 to $20 that occurred in the year that followed could have been accomplished by a zombie. If you look at the stock performance from now to 4 years prior, you'll see how the company has severely underperformed. IGT stock went from about $19 in early Jan 2010 to under $15 as of Jan 26, 2014. Under Patti's reign, IGT has dropped about 20% in 4 years, while the general market has experienced one of the greatest bull markets ever! I wish someone could explain to me why this performance merited $8.5m in total compensation in 2011 (according to Forbes). Merit increases - the merit increase process assumes that only 30% of the workforce contributed to the goals of the company. The other 70% either gets tipped or nothing, resulting in a negative disposable income curve for most employees. This fallacy assumes that the weight of the company is carried by a few employees, and does nothing to recognize the accomplishments of the team. (See my comment above about the rank and file...) Politics - at the director level (and sometimes the manager level) and above, it's nearly impossible to accomplish meaningful cross functional process change and improvement. The company is bogged down with all sorts of useless KPI reporting that makes management look great, but doesn't tell the true story. The only way that anything gets accomplished is by placing the burden of process change on a severely under-staffed IT department to change an already complex system(s) to meet everyone's demands (and myopic KPI's) making it even tougher for the rank and file to do their jobs and even harder to train new employees on increasingly complex processes and systems.

Viewing 91 - 93 of 2,033 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,282 IGT reviews submitted anonymously by IGT employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if IGT is right for you.