Texas Instruments reviews

3.8

69% would recommend to a friend

(5,714 total reviews)
avatar

Haviv Ilan

60% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

Texas Instruments has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 5,714 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Texas Instruments employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Manufacturing industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
1.0
Apr 21, 2019

From Great to Living Nightmare

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good learning opportunities out of college. Profit sharing has been strong. First year was great, then it turned into a nightmare.

Cons

All comments are my opinion. Do you enjoy having to cc your manager and their manager on every email you send? How about weekly micromanaging sessions which you'll spend many hours preparing for (but always get crapped on during)? Watching your team of ~5 all quit in the last year or two? Management which is commonly referred to as "slave drivers?" All this while being paid 40% under market value!? Bay Area compensation is truly awful. Don't think being new to relocate there will help - I knew someone from a rotation program who was let go within 9 months due to reorg. He shared a room with 2 other people. Seriously, compensation is low. What I learned is that there is a "culture of fear." All decisions are top down and all you are supposed to say is yes. This place will kill your soul and make you woefully unprepared for anywhere you actually have to be creative or think for yourself. Seems even after more than a year in a new company that some still couldn't shake all the bad habits and it hampered their ability to perform optimally (such as speaking up or coming up with ideas in a more open culture). Management varies a lot in quality, had some great (all left within a year, smart), and some truly evil managers. Even after a whole team left over a couple of years and managers kept dropping like flies, nobody asked a single question of why that might be (terrible management). I do think the company is aware and the awful management is purposeful to some degree. Cheaper to get employees to quit than lay them off. Better to grind through people or only have the people who don't know work life boundaries stay around. Or so the thinking goes. Tech is awful, large parts of work should be automated and systematized. Management should be happy to hear large parts of the job could be done away with. Does not work like a tech company under the hood. I learned the irony of Silicon Valley being named after dinosaurs like this while real tech companies push boundaries with their products, business model, operations, compensation, and culture. No CRM. Seriously, everything is tribal knowledge, email chains, and spreadsheets meticulously updated for many hours each week. Lots of early and late calls with Europe and Asia while still needing to be butt in seat during normal hours. Innovation = cheaper, long gone are the days of exciting new tech. Thanks for the depression, anxiety, and low pay, but I'll go elsewhere.

2.0
Jun 6, 2024

Changes in culture

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Working on multiple projects, challenging environment

Cons

I worked for TI for >10years and saw how culture changed over the last years. TI used to care for its people but that seems to be a thing of the past. Too many experienced people have been let go or forced to leave and TI is getting a reputation of being a "puppy mill", hiring almost exclusively new college graduates to do the job of multiple experience people with less resources and experience . I witnessed multiple people (colleagues and people reporting to me) having mental breakdowns and anxiety disorders due to overwork and burnout. People with very low experience get promoted because they are "yes people" and/or like to follow a more bullyish attitude toward employees, and this has resulted in very poor R&D investment and very high attrition rates. I can say that salary is competitive, but it's still behind many competitors. TI is a big company and some business units are better than others, but this culture is permeating throughout the company based on discussion with colleagues,

1.0
Jan 31, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great pay (they have to in order to abuse people the way they do). Good on a resume (unless your future employer has worked there, and then they'll want to make sure you weren't there very long and that you were smart enough to see how dysfunctional it was.) Great benefits (right up until the point they outsource your job to China or India). Summary: If you are only interested in high wages and good benefits while suffering abuse and having your skills waste away until they find away to replace you with a new-college-graduate in China or India- this is the place for you! Ran by people who know how to get the stock price up, regardless of the long-term implications for employees or their families.

Cons

We go through a big organizational shake-up every 1-2 years so you never get a chance to actually *do* anything but meet your new boss and fill out new forms. TI is run by accountants and slimy/unethical salesmen who load the ranks with terrible middle-managers which carry out their biddings in hopes that they will impress their bosses (while not giving any thought to you or your family). They fill up your traditional 40 hour work week with meetings, and checking-of-irrelevant-boxes, various United Way campaigns and diversity initiatives and then expect you to do the actual *work* in your free time. You will be treated as an untrusted invader walking around in their building- a bothersome cost sink that is there just to make sure decades old technology is delivered according to some unreasonable schedule that they have poorly planned for and staffed to meet. You will NOT do anything innovative here- no matter how much you've drank the marketing kool-aid. The management desires only to make cheap foreign-produced products and only make something special every once in a great while when something innovative sneaks past them. They buy great american companies when they want innovation, then completely mismanage and mishandle the portfolios they inherent while trying to get as much quick and easy money from the innovation they purchased It is a demoralizing place to work, and supremely dehumanizing in nearly every way.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 5,714 Reviews

Glassdoor has 7,376 Texas Instruments reviews submitted anonymously by Texas Instruments employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Texas Instruments is right for you.