Intuit reviews

4.2

83% would recommend to a friend

(11,737 total reviews)
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Sasan Goodarzi

80% approve of CEO

79% positive business outlook

Intuit has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 11,737 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
1.0
Dec 10, 2016

One of the WORST places to work

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Competitive salary for the area Decent medical benefits

Cons

Managers and execs are totally disconnected from reality, pushing product teams to work on projects that the development team is incapable of building properly. Managers lack awareness of how much time and energy work actually takes employees to complete, piling on more work despite concerns raised. Development teams and technical implementations are a total joke, so product quality is quite poor. All the proper fixes are estimated to take 2 years, but none of them ever get started. No project planning or proper documentation whatsoever, so projects go on forever and discussions are rehashed again and again. Total lack of communication and transparency. You only find out the things critical to doing your job by being in the right place at the right time, or by knowing the right people. Keeping on employees (including managers) who are completely incapable of doing their jobs, despite this being obvious to everyone they work with. Conflicting messages about work-life balance, ending up in people working all day and evenings to keep up. Brand new building is nice and shiny, but the lack of sufficient personal work space and privacy means work is hard to do in the office. Very low morale among the employees who are actually capable of doing their job.

3.0
Dec 9, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The people are good to work with

Cons

Layoffs all the time. Management is mess lots of power struggles and politics. Weren't happy with the glass door standings so there was a company push to improve it on glass door instead of actually fixing the problem.

2.0
Dec 4, 2016

It's a good company

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

One of the best companies in the Bay Area: its 401k matching (10k max) is probably the best in the Bay Area. Pay is relatively good, not in the same tier like Google, Salesforce, LinkedIn or SF start-ups, but not bad. Good company if you are Indian or about to retire.

Cons

While Intuit tries to advertise itself as a diverse place to work (programs for getting women back to work, LGBT tolerance), it conveniently ignores the biggest diversity problem: racial diversity at HQ (Mountain View). Intuit is being overrun by Indians, especially in its engineering organization. Even with its current state of poor racial diversity, Intuit is importing lots of their employees from India Development Center (IDC) to the HQ, making the matter worse. An anecdotal example of Intuit diversity: we had a team party, in a room of 50+ ppl, I counted only about 5 white and 2-3 East-Asian coworkers; the rest are Indians. And that will affect the overall morale of the "minority". The majority Indians, while most are friendly, tend to group together, even during team meeting or social. It's hard to break into those circles or even influence critical business decisions (most Indian coworkers agreeing with Indian boss). Within a week when I left, 5 or 6 people moved on to other companies. That's probably usual in Silicon Valley except all of them are East-Asians (Chinese, Korean, Singaporean) and white. Maybe it's coincidental but I wouldn't think so. Another problem is Intuit having lots of layoffs/re-orgs and seeing your Indian boss naturally closer to your Indian teammates, you won't have the confidence that your fate is decided by your work quality. I have to say that most of my Indian coworkers are competent and qualified. However, when many candidates and most interview committees are entirely Indians, I'm not sure if there is no bias in their interview process. When I moved to another similarly large company, I noticed that although there are many Indian co-workers but also there is as many East-Asian (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) and white coworkers (roughly 1/3 Indians, 1/3 East-Asians). That seems more statistically reasonable, compared to Bay Area demographics.

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Intuit Response
9y
Thanks for sharing your feedback with us. It’s valuable input to help us be the best we can be. When it comes to diversity, we are on a journey. While we are extremely proud of the progress we’ve made in attracting and engaging diverse talent, we know we still have work to do, specifically with underrepresented minority groups such as African-American and Latino. In the meantime, I hope you’ll take a moment to read more about our diversity and inclusion efforts: http://www.intuit.com/company/profile/diversity/
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