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      Northrop Grumman

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      Does Northrop Grumman offer bonus pay?

      Northrop Grumman reviews

      Great Place to Work

      Principal embedded software engineer
      Current employee
      Linthicum Heights, MD
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Competitive salary, people are willing to help you learn, flexible work (hybrid WFH, and choose your own hours), decent bonus structure, overtime offered over 80 hours in a two week stretch (but must be approved by manager) Benefits are solid. Overall a great place to work!

      Cons

      For the Linthicum Heights office, there are several buildings where the work is done that are all spread out over a 1-2 mile area, which can make traversing in between slightly inconvenient.

      Great benefits but limited growth opportunities

      Hr assistant
      Current employee
      Irving, TX
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Great benefits, pto, tuition reimbursement, hybrid schedule, bonus, schedule

      Cons

      No growth, management, pay, satisfaction survey not taken into consideration,

      Good management and flexibility

      Systems engineer
      Current employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Voice is heard, good management, flexible work environment

      Cons

      Poor bonus structure, dwindling work from home options

      Great People and Company Culture

      Associate gnc engineer
      Current employee
      Chandler, AZ
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      The people are friendly and the environment is relatively relaxed. The pay is decent, the benefits are decent, and the hours are moderately flexible.

      Cons

      The bonus structure is less than ideal, and very little information was disseminated prior to their most recent round of layoffs.

      Good for resume, bad for mental health

      Comms specialist
      Former employee
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Fast-paced work and 9/80 schedule

      Cons

      Poor work/balance across the whole comms org; constant re-orgs when things aren't going well internally; lack of support from executive leadership; poor bonuses and rare promotions

      1

      Don’t work

      Anonymous intern
      Former intern
      Roy, UT
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Good bonus and work life balance

      Cons

      Everything else genuinely truly sucks

      OK Place to Work for People with Clearances, Compared to Other Defense Contractors

      Staff electrical engineer
      Former employee
      Chandler, AZ
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      ⋅ The pay is only OK. ⋅ The benefits are only OK. ⋅ The people are only OK.

      Cons

      ⋅ They built a new building and promised everyone they would get their own cubicle. A year later, they are forcing people into sharing a cubicle built for one person. It is horrendous. ⋅ Bonuses get smaller every year, despite the company boasting record profits. Everyone gets the same bonus, no matter what position or level you are at, except that there is a higher tier that exists for managers and executives which pays a percentage of your base pay, I believe up to 15%, but I may be over or under on that percentage. Bonuses paid in a year are for the prior year: 2020 - $2,400 2021 - $2,225 2022 - $1,800 2023 - $1,270 This trend will continue downward. ⋅ Merit increases average 2.5% per year. You have to be a rockstar to get 3% or more. ⋅ Getting promoted is extremely difficult. You have to be so impactful that a VP will know your name and the importance of your work, or you will not get promoted because a VP has to sign off on the promotion. VPs are typically at least 3 or 4 levels up from you in your organization. Good luck getting them to notice your work. You have to get your team lead to highly recommend you throughout the year to your manager, then your manager needs to do the same to your director, then your director needs to do the same to your VP. Also, when in a grade, you are competing for visibility with EVERYONE on site at that pay grade, even on other programs, and in other departments. A Principal Mechanical Engineer is competing for recognition against EVERY OTHER Principal level engineer on site, not just Mechanical. If you hire in as an Associate Engineer (new grad), in a year or two you will automatically level up to an Engineer level. In another year or two, you will automatically level up to a Principal Engineer. You will never level up again unless you get VPs to notice you standing out amongst all of the other Principal Engineers on site. I have known of several Engineers who finished their careers and retired as Principal Engineers, never moving any higher in responsibilities or salary. ⋅ Getting promoted by changing position is extremely difficult. Besides the hiring manager and HR needing to agree, a VP needs to agree, otherwise they make a long list of reasons why you need to move laterally with no pay increase, even though it is a new job. ⋅ Recruitment is terrible because they cannot recognize talent when they receive resumes. During the offer process, they will chuckle at you when you tell them other similar companies in the area are paying much more than NG. ⋅ People who move upwards or into management or team lead positions tend to be the people who are jerks, not necessarily technically competent or people who are able to work well with others. The bigger the jerk you are, the better chances you will have as being considered "low-level leadership" material. ⋅ They do not care about experience, talent, or staying power. They keep bringing in new grads or people young in their careers who leave after 6 months for a little bit more money. They hire people that have obviously bounced around from place to place to chase money and cannot believe their eyes when they leave NG after a short time. ⋅ They lay off talent & experience to keep cheaper, inexperienced people. ⋅ They also keep hiring young people who have zero work ethic who they either keep around forever, or keep until that person bounces to another company for $10k/year more. If I hear another single, 22 year-old complain about their lack of a work-life balance because they needed to put in 45 hours that week and therefore they could not get in more happy hour time, I think I will explode (figuratively speaking, of course). ⋅ They make a lot of decisions based on Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion (DEI), so if you are white, male, straight, etc., even if you are terrific at your job, they will pass you by for a someone who checks the boxes for a diversity hire, even if they are not very good at their job. When I asked HR how much DEI played into the recent 33% reduction in force at the Chandler site in August 2024, she told me that DEI was "very much a part of their decision making because they needed to make it "fair"". The word "fair" in the modern context refers to "Equity", not "Equality", so that means the "oppressive", "inherently racist & sexist" people are minimized to make more opportunities for the "oppressed". Extra points for people who are convinced they are multi-oppressed, such as a black man dressed in woman-face who identifies as a lesbian. You get to check three boxes there!! I was half tempted to change my "gender identity" and race in Workday after the layoff announcement was made; just so I could increase my chances of remaining in my job. Yes, you only have to check a box online to change sex at NG. No sterilization or bodily mutilation necessary! I am curious to see if Glassdoor will post my honest and accurate review of NG. I felt this way long before the layoff came. But all-in-all, as far as Defense contractors go in Arizona, I would still consider returning to Chandler or Gilbert for the right opportunity. Even with these issues, working at NG is much, much better than working at Honeywell or Raytheon, to list two examples!!

      2

      I don’t recommend working here

      Space systems engineering
      Current employee
      Redondo Beach, CA
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      1. It’s not too hard to internally apply to other positions to get better pay and hopefully better work. 2. Easy to coast

      Cons

      1. You have to stay 3 years to get your stocks vested. All or nothing which is really dumb. 2. Raises are awful. 2.5% was the standard this year, while 3% or higher is considered “good” 3. They reward new hires, not current employees. They give high raises, sign on bonus, and/or promos to poach new talent. However, they treat current employees poorly. 4. When you meet the number of years of experience to move up to the next level, you have to “prove” you are worth the promo. Really dumb considering point #3. My manager told me to get a competing offer to help make a case for a promo. 5. Tons of nepotism and non-technical managers. They laid off workers who actually did work and came in person in 2024 but kept managers who don’t actually work (I.e. scrum masters) 6. Too top heavy… more managers, directors and VPs compared to other contractors in my experience. managers who don’t manage… but with the manager pay band. I’ve never seen that until I started working here. 7. Annual raises are typically 900 to 1.5k usd unless you are nominated for a better one. In general, it is very rare for non management to get a better bonus

      9

      Great Benefits - No Training

      Principle project manager
      Former employee
      Oklahoma City, OK
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      The benefits are great and the ability to work a 9/80 or flex your time is an added bonus.

      Cons

      The lack of training and standardization is a major issue. Everyone does it their way and expects for everyone else to follow. Secondly, the amount of meetings that held everyday limit productivity from the Managers down. Nothing happen after 5:00pm because there is not time in the day to accomplish any actual work due to 8-9 hours of meetings held everyday.

      Pay Bands Don't Really Mean Anything

      Data scientist
      Current employee
      Roy, UT
      Recommend
      CEO approval
      Business Outlook

      Pros

      Willing to work with you with you schedule, but really depends on role and manager. Get to learn new things and implement them.

      Cons

      No bonuses or bare minimum raise to say "we gave you a raise". Hard to advanced, MUST HAVE A DEGREE TO ADVANCE, people with 24+ years of experience in their role are not getting promotions while excelling at their job while people with 2 years of experience and a degree are jumping from 2 or more levels in a single promotion without providing the same level of competency as the person with more experience and no degree.

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