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National Instruments

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National Instruments reviews

3.7

68% would recommend to a friend

(2,457 total reviews)

Alex Davern

63% approve of CEO

46% positive business outlook

National Instruments has an employee rating of 3.7 out of 5 stars, based on 2,457 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The National Instruments employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufactura industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
2.0
Nov 28, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

interesting work. Smart coworkers. Making a difference. Convenient location if you live north. Challenging projects, can progress quickly. Stable employer. Opportunity to travel based on department. Access to interesting equipment. World class programming software (LabVIEW).

Cons

3rd year in a row of 0$ bonus!!! On top of almost record revenues. This is super frustrating and demoralizing. I see "leadership" who is getting promoted, bonuses and not doing JACK for us. There is Tons of doubletalk about employee engagement and making improvements but tiny raises (1% is HUGE), zero bonus and mandatory actions like : Blood draw annually for medical analysis or face $60 Monthly charge $0 bonus when HUGE deal last year about changing the formula and "setting aside $6mil for bonuses" Crap (1% for years on end) for raises when Austin is expensive Making building improvements and HUGE deal about it, who cares? We are here to work.

2.0
Nov 3, 2016

Not one of the best places to work

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The campus is nice. The company is finally making much needed updates to the facilities. Benefits are average compared to most large companies. Great people to work with.

Cons

The work environment stinks. Upper management has totally killed moral. Management is not honest with the employees. A lot of back stabbing. A lot of really good employees are leaving. Pay is well below average.

2.0
Feb 2, 2021

You get what you're paid for.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Great work-life balance. I frequently have the opportunity to take time in the middle of my day for things like errands, doctor's appointments, picking up/dropping off children, etc. This is really the thing that's kept me at the company as long as I've been there. Leadership understands pretty well that we're human and have human things to which we must tend. I don't have much to add in the way of detail, but it truly is great. - The people are, on the whole, pretty friendly. - Opportunities to work remote/from home - Starting vacation is 3 weeks. - A LOT of sick time. I've never once had to care about how much sick time I have left, because I always have a laughably large amount. - Lots of opportunities to change roles within the company and pursue your interests - The people around you tend to be pretty smart! - Not a lot of office drama. There's the normal politicking at the leadership level, but for most people, it's a pretty mellow place to work. The average age outside of Sales and Support is somewhere around 40 by my estimation, which is probably a contributing factor. - Clothing rules are very lax. Depending on the department, you could even get away with shorts, a t-shirt, and flip flops. Jeans are more common, though. You'd have to look pretty terrible for your clothing to be a problem.

Cons

- The company is a very standard company-- the office culture is very Office Space. - The physical office is horrible. They've taken some steps to address it lately (remodeling the cafeteria, for example) and the grounds are generally pretty nice, but the cubicles have definitely been there longer than I've been alive. - Regular layoffs despite advertising as a company that does not do layoffs. While recruiting, they say a lot about how well they handled the 2008 recession and how they've been on the "Best Places to Work" list many times, omitting that neither of those apply to their practices over the last few years. The layoffs are also usually followed by a round of hires overseas. While I enjoy working with all my colleagues across the world, I have been told point-blank by management that the reason we hire internationally so much is that "foreign employees are cheaper." - Compensation is regularly below industry standard. Internally it's one of the most common complaints, and kind of accepted as the trade-off for the flexibility in your schedule. Some years, my raises didn't even cover inflation. The "lack of budget" also manifests in lack of formal training. Instead, you learn new skills through trial-by-fire. - Constant org redesigns. In the entire time I've been here, I have not once felt stable/secure in my role. - C-suite seems very disconnected from day-to-day operations. It's not uncommon for us to get mandates for new ways of operating <1 month before we're expected to make the change. - IT in particular is a disaster-- all of the solutions are propped up with match sticks, tooth picks, and duct tape. Leadership doesn't consider IT a priority, even though almost 100% of daily operations rely on it, leading to frustration across the board about lack of IT bandwidth and IT's inability to build/fix the solutions needed for the "quick change of direction" mentioned above. - THERE ARE VIRTUALLY NO BLACK PEOPLE. There are plenty of people from all sorts of ethnic backgrounds... except Black. In the entire time I've been at the company, I've met exactly one Black person that wasn't either custodial staff or security. The CEO pays a lot of lip service to BLM, but I've seen no reforms whatsoever to our hiring practices. Oh, and the Diversity & Inclusion lead is white. - Rampant sexism. Although there are plenty of women employed, almost all of leadership is older, white men. There's no real path for addressing sexism in the office; I certainly wouldn't feel safe reporting sexism even if it was making me miserable. - The benefits keep getting worse. Once upon a time, in the distant past, the benefits were so good that "you could have a baby for $50," as said by my long-timer colleague. Now, every year they increase the cost of benefits over pace of inflation, switch to cheaper providers, and then email-blast us with slide shows about how their benefits package is "competitive" and, bafflingly, how we should be using our healthcare as little as possible (???) to keep costs down for the company (?????????). - Annual bonuses are tied to company performance... and the company doesn't do well. In the years that we have had bonuses, they were a laughable amount. I'm talking, like, $200 for employees with salaries upwards of $80k. Unless, of course, you're in senior leadership. Anyone with a job title of "Director" or higher gets an ACTUAL annual bonus,-- regardless of company performance-- while simultaneously nodding sympathetically at the concerns of us peons about our pitiful salaries. I'm not even a disgruntled employee. I'm fairly comfortable with my role in the company, but this is a pretty exhaustive list of the sorts of things you're expected to tolerate for the flexibility you get. If you value that flexibility pretty highly (as I do), this may be a perfectly suitable place to work. If you value any of the things in my cons list... I would urge you to reconsider working here.

Viewing 25 - 27 of 2,457 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,924 National Instruments reviews submitted anonymously by National Instruments employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if National Instruments is right for you.