AMD reviews

4.0

83% would recommend to a friend

(4,894 total reviews)
avatar

Dr. Lisa Su

95% approve of CEO

84% positive business outlook

AMD has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 4,894 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The AMD employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
2.0
Apr 24, 2016

Frequent layoffs

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Competitive pay and good benefits. Also, beautiful campus with on-site cafe, Starbucks, gym and game systems. Other than a few bad apples, mostly great people to work with.

Cons

A lot of great people, but bad management made me dislike my job. My boss would do anything to make himself look good. It didn't matter how badly he treated others. That being said, there were great people too that I really enjoyed working with. Also, layoffs were constant.

3.0
Oct 2, 2013

Going downhill

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great people, some great managers, opportunity to work from home.

Cons

Lousy workspace in the corporate office. Some of the managers have horrific people skills, with one-dimensional ideas on what it takes to motivate. No significant pay raises in years. Too much work to do anything well.

2.0
Mar 2, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

AMD is constantly looking for new ways to compete with Intel. It is this rivalry that pushes innovation and product quality, pushing everyone to think creatively about how to do more with much less resources than Intel. AMD is extremely family friendly. All of my managers supported taking time off for family or health reasons, and though the culture is to push through it, this is considered to be above and beyond expectations. Working from home is perfectly acceptable, and everyone assumes you're reachable on your company-provided cell phone if you're out of the office.

Cons

Since the departure of founder Jerry Sanders, AMD has been wandering aimlessly for the next innovation. Customer satisfaction is important at the time of sale and after the sale, but no/little thought is given to what the customer will want when the products are being designed. The term "customer-centric innovation" that Hector Ruiz pushed for so many years has nothing to do with innovation around the product (AMD acquires companies with good ideas, it does not have an R&D of its own). Even after the sale, software that supports the product is a necessary expenditure that is minimized. AMD has lost its crown as the leading processor innovator and speed king, and has never understood that it has a role in developing hardware+software solutions that will create demand for processor products. Though it is possible to be promoted to team lead or manager with enough effort, director and above titled open positions are almost always filled from the outside by someone with experience working with that title. Despite all of the HR promises about reviewing the skill set of employees, continuing education to develop the skills of employees, and the value placed on employees' work, AMD does not value its employees and treats them as a necessary expenditure: * Medical benefits are structured to minimize costs to providers and waste as much of the employee's time as possible (e.g. blood tests can not be performed in any doctor's office, and the insurance company will have the employee paying a significant percentage of the costs). * IT continuously seeks excuses not to fix your equipment. * Sabbticals are a privilege, not a right, and may be postponed as long as it takes to achieve profitability but non-profitability does not affect executives' bonuses. * Administrators are for department directors and above. Everyone is expected to: - book their own travel - fill out their own expense reports - look through the catalog of office supplies, though the director's admin will obtain director's approval to buy office supplies. * Coffee and tea are free but vending machines and cafeteria are expensive. * If you're there long enough, their outsourced employee recognition vendor may send you a catalog of AMD-logoed junk to select from (for 5 years of service, I picked the watch with gold trim which came with a note warning that it is not water resistent). Directors and above have certain privileges that make working harder (to get the coveted rank) desirable... until you understand that directors are hired from the outside. The concept of "management by walking around" is completely foreign in this culture. Instead, AMD has a culture of maximizing required approvals, forms, and meetings for Managers, Directors and the various Vice President ranks (VP, Corporate VP, Senior VP, Executive VP) segregating managers from their direct reports. Executives are members of an elite club with special privileges including access to the corporate jet, access to in-house IT, and exclusive meeting rooms. Management style is typically "manage by fad" and changes every 9 months.

Viewing 31 - 33 of 4,894 Reviews

Glassdoor has 6,330 AMD reviews submitted anonymously by AMD employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if AMD is right for you.