Intuit reviews

4.2

82% would recommend to a friend

(11,760 total reviews)
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Sasan Goodarzi

78% approve of CEO

77% positive business outlook

Intuit has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 11,760 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Intuit 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

12K reviews
2.0
Jan 29, 2010

It's The People, Isn't It?

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Excellent Benefits Excellent Facilities/Offices Smart, dedicated technical people to work with Not afraid to invest in new technologies Connected services strategy

Cons

I've worked at Intuit for many years (more than 15). I love the people I work with. Over the past 1.5 years, we've had a strategy and mindset change focusing on connected services. While I understand where we're going (I was already working in this space prior to the increased focus on it) - I don't think we really went into this fully prepared. Most of the managers in my PD area previously managed desktop development projects - they have no experience in managing online projects at all. This has resulted in poor planning, poor estimates of work, poor execution of the work and tremendous schedule compression which is killing the employees. We've tried outsourcing some of the work to other PD units in India, but it hasn't helped. Our skill sets are not where they need to be right now, in both the management and even in some of the engineering areas. There are lots of bright people here, it's just taking a while to get everyone to understand the connected services mindset. Idea generation seems to be a problem in my business unit. I understand a company can get many of its innovative ideas for new products, prototypes, etc. from the employees, however it seems in my business unit that it is over emphasized. While I understand and agree with the concept of whitespace time and ideation, the reality is that many engineers simply don't have a lot of time to work in this space. We have people that we pay to think about and generate these types of ideas - they're called product managers. I guess if your product managers lack the experience and technical knowledge in their space then it stands to reason that the business would use others to help bridge the gap. The work life balance here has disappeared. It didn't have to - with the economy in the state it's in I think many are fearful they may lose their job so they won't stand up for themselves or speak up at all when unreasonable demands are placed on their time by others (which is almost always due to poor planning). If we could see the fruit of our labor (i.e. what we end up with actually making money for the business) then maybe I could be satisfied with working a little more to gain more. What I see now is more people working on these connected services than actually use them. Low customer acceptance rates make it seem like the work is throw away at times. Couple this with migrating our applications to new data centers with new technology that hasn't been fully proven yet and you've got one big, time consuming, chaotic set of things happening, and that is what's happening, almost every day. You can shrug it off as strategy/growing pains, etc., but this is the worst year on the job that I've ever experienced out of all the years I've worked here - and trust me, there were some bad years in there.

2.0
Dec 11, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

benefits - excellent benefit package compensation package - salary/bonus, etc

Cons

senior leaders are not held accountable to results and deliver sub-standard work. This is tolerated and those who go above and beyond are not rewarded in any way. Employee development seems to stop once you reach a certain level. Expectations seem different for different levels of employees with regard to devleoping employees. If a frontline manager was not having performance conversations or coaching a frontline agent, they would be held accountable. It does not seem that accountability reaches to the Director and VP level. There is no accountability for directors and VPs who pay no attention to their direct reports and only manage their careers. People are making critical decisions that impact customers who have no idea what the work at the frontlines really is.

3.0
Oct 7, 2009

Itâ??s the People

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits including 401K match, health insurance, flexible spending account, fitness incentive, education reimbursement, and flexibility in work schedule

Cons

During downsizing - talent does not appear to be a consideration in who is retained/released. Many excellent employees are lost; along with their corporate knowledge. This also results in truly talented and employable individuals pursuing other opportunities because there is no sense of job security. Seems to have lost sight of basic values -- It's the people -- People are (or can be) the foundation of Intuitâ??s success (or not)

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