Qcells reviews

2.5

20% would recommend to a friend

(345 total reviews)
avatar

Justin Lee

22% approve of CEO

19% positive business outlook

Qcells has an employee rating of 2.5 out of 5 stars, based on 345 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Qcells employee rating is 32% below average for employers within the Energy, Mining & Utilities industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

345 reviews
1.0
Sep 7, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It is easy to get a job here out of college. They sponsor H1B (if you can last enough time). It is a green energy company. They are growing in scale very fast due to investment from the US government and Hanwha. Udemy is giving for free to access courses. Quality team has a lot of work but you will be treated better. HR also seems good to work for after talking to people. (Avoid every other team)

Cons

There are a lot, so let's get started: 1. Communication: It is terrible. Teams are divided by department (Process, Equipment, Production, and Quality). All teams have different priorities, and when they conflict, managers will argue with each other about what to do, THROUGH the engineers. Manager performance is based on their KPI numbers. They will do whatever it takes to make it better for them, even if it is worse for the company as a whole, and they will use their employees as a proxy. Ends up with teams blaming each other constantly, with no one willing to take responsibility. Managers will mostly speak in Korean about anything important, and you will hear most information translated from other Korean employees at your level. They will talk about you in Korean, in front of you, even if they know English. 2. Work-Life Balance: Not great for most engineers. It is very much the Korean work culture where they want you to put work before anything else, but they will not/do not value their employees in any capacity. The red flag I should've noticed - during the interview, they said it was a 'Family Culture'. This translates to 'We want you to work tirelessly for minimum pay'. 3. Pay: Everyone gets around 60k whether you are an Undergraduate or hold a Master's Degree. There is not much transparency about pay raises and minimum communication 4. Growth: None for non-Koreans. The majority of management are Koreans sent from the main plant in JC, Korea. They hold absolute power over the majority of decisions. There is no room for advancement for people from any other background, and you are treated as less vital and all the important information goes to people who can communicate in Korean. 5. Culture: Touched on this before, but a lot of people get treated badly, including myself. I've seen 6 people leave in 3-4 months due to work culture and their managers. You are only reprimanded for making mistakes, and almost never appreciated for putting in extra work and creating some sort of improvement. Again, to management, only the numbers matter. Doesn't matter to them if you make an improvement or work on important documentation. They will yell at you, insult you, blame you, and get you fired for standing up for yourself. This is perhaps the greatest con. The Turnover rate at this firm is extremely high for this reason. There are separate cliques as well and even though the company is getting more diverse, there is no effort put in by people to mingle and involve the minorities at the company 6. Training: The training is only to show that they are doing it on paper. It is essentially non-existent. You have to try your hardest to learn on the job, and if your mentor is too busy, it is very difficult to learn since it is considered a low-priority task by the company. 7. HR and Conflict: HR has a lot of nice people from what I've seen, but they have people who will lie to you and their policy is not there to help the employee at all. HR also has no authority over Korean managers, and the managers can tell HR what to do. They have blatantly violated the safety policy and Employee Handbook, but HR must go along with what they want since they can contact upper management to get involved. I know this is long and detailed, but I think it is important that if you have accepted an offer or are considering one, you should know what it is really like to work at the Dalton Plant. Here are some teams I would avoid working in due to management alone: 1. Process (Front-end and Back-end) 2. Production( Front-end and Back-end) 3. Equipment(Front-end)

1.0
Mar 25, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Really good healthcare coverage, no premiums (this perk is pretty awesome)

Cons

- The company suffers from poor management structure, making promotions extremely difficult, even if you consistently perform well. - Management regularly assigns additional responsibilities without corresponding promotions or compensation. - Reorganizations occur approximately every three months, creating instability. During my time at Qcells, I experienced multiple manager changes and frequent layoffs affecting colleagues. Despite this uncertainty, there was constant pressure to perform at a high level. - Teams often receive unrealistic goals, making genuine success nearly impossible, which negatively impacts performance reviews. - There is evident favoritism and discrimination, particularly against employees who are not from Hanwha/Korean - Certain management personnel repeatedly caused issues without facing any accountability or consequences. - The Axia subsidiary is particularly toxic and challenging, marked by a hostile work environment. - Workplace politics and backstabbing are rampant, making it nearly impossible to maintain integrity and be the "good guy." - Bonuses are rarely paid out, and even when promised, they are not guaranteed. Look, there is so much wrong with this company that I could write a thesis and publish a scientific article on how bad it is. Just take my advice and stay away from Qcells unless you literally have no other way to pay the bills. I am 1000x happier since I left this company. I feel like I got out of prison.

1.0
Jun 23, 2022

MOST TOXIC and INCOMPETENT WORKPLACE

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Management's incompetence. Management incompetence can be a positive if they do not micromanage your work. But they sure do and they clearly lack experience and leadership.

Cons

Cancelled a contract with a vendor on an engagement. Urgently reached out to the same vendor for a separate engagement. After the consulting agency spent weekends working to demo a prototype management declined to move forward with any and all potential vendors for no reason. Management will ask employees to take initiative. When one does work proactively management comes back and criticize for not getting their consent for the workplan. Management provides a written set of instructions to follow. If employee follows the written instructions management will then be silent and criticize for lack of decision making. So the upshot is employees are scolded when they don't get permission and get scolded for following written instructions. Employees are treated like contractors. They hire so frequently simply to replace the employees they fired. They will likely fire most of those new employees they hired. They provide toxic and negative feedback to their business partners after making these partners work incessantly to please them. Some of these business partners who received toxic feedback from QCells management are later promoted in their organizations due to their exceptional customer service and response. Managers do not provide clear communication. Expectations are off the charts. They will ask for the equivalent of a self-driving car and expect the result completed overnight. No clear OKR (Object Key Results) set forth and only criticism of your final results. Management will ask for work beyond the job description. If you are in finance they expect you to do work in the technology area. If you are in marketing they might expect you to work on financial models. Company frequently gets past due notices from suppliers and expects the non-finance folks to resolve these issues. Like every toxic organization there may still be a good person or two. But examine the high turnover rate mentioned in other reviews. Most of those turnovers were probably involuntary. Should you risk it?

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