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Agilent Technologies

Engaged Employer

Agilent Technologies R&D Software Engineer reviews

2.8

37% would recommend to a friend

(21 total reviews)
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Padraig McDonnell

37% approve of CEO

37% positive business outlook

R D Software Engineer employees have rated Agilent Technologies with 2.8 out of 5 stars, based on 21 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most R D Software Engineer professionals have an average working experience there. Agilent Technologies is rated 20% below average by R D Software Engineer professionals compared to other employers within the Pharmaceutical & Biotechnology industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

21 reviews
2.0
Jun 16, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great people for the most part, very technical, very respectful. Good work life balance if you have a family. Management is pretty flexible in this regards. Great for life sciences and chemical analysis since they seem to be heavily investing in it.

Cons

No career path especially if you're not in Life sciences or Chemical analysis. Salaries are claimed to be on par with the industry, not sure which industry they are comparing with. Bean counters rule the place with cost cutting as the mantra. The semi-annual employee survey is the only thing that seems to jolt managers into movement.

3.0
Nov 16, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The hiring in the "good old HP days" was very thorough, and many of these people are still around. Friendly cooperative atmosphere, everybody is trying to do the right thing. Experienced engineers are happy to share their knowledge. Work-life balance is good.

Cons

Pay and benefits used to be great, but they are getting worse every year. Prospects for career advancement are very poor, as the path is blocked by people who have been in their jobs for 20+ years, and are politically well connected. Ranking and pay administration is a joke. Not hiring enough younger people, and not able to hold onto the ones they do hire. This company may implode in 5-10 years when a lot of the baby boomers finally retire and their knowledge is lost. Too few talented younger people will be left to fill the gaps.

4.0
Feb 19, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Definitely work life balance. They've been incredibly supportive of parental leave, allowing me to work part time, taking time when my mom was sick. There is definitely an attitude that employees are people and grownups and responsible, and we are treated as such. The benefits are good, though not as good as they used to be (the current health plan is only slightly better than nothing, although at least it's cheap). This is also a place where you are likely to be surrounded by bright, competent, interesting and interested folks with diverse interests. I've found managers to be very supportive of my desires around furthering my education in my field and/or learning more about adjacent fields.

Cons

This is definitely not the place for someone hoping for a quick rise to the top. They do promote from within (which I don't always think is good -- fabulous engineers don't always make great managers), but you can expect to hang out at Career Level for a long time before you get an opportunity like that. As I mentioned, the health plan is definitely the lowlight of the benefits package. If you've got a family, plan on several thousand dollars a year of out of pocket expenses. The 401(k) match is good, but not stellar. Working for a big company has its down sides. IT support, HR and benefits administration are all handled by outside contractors (we're all familiar with those call centers that give their hirees minimal training and a script to work off of, and do not seem to see english fluency as a basic job requirement). Long-time employees are usually aware of a local resource or two, but until you're "in the know", it can be hard to navigate life's basic administrative tasks. It takes a long time to become a productive member of the team at this company. There's a lot of in-house innovation, which is great, but it does mean that most people come in to the job without much knowledge or skill specific to their work. (The up side of this that R&D Engineers have the most job security of anybody in the company -- it's incredibly expensive to train replacements.) All the Re-Organizing and Re-Prioritizing can be really tiresome. That's any big company, though.

Viewing 16 - 18 of 21 Reviews

Glassdoor has 3,214 Agilent Technologies reviews submitted anonymously by Agilent Technologies employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Agilent Technologies is right for you.