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Applied Information Sciences

Engaged Employer

Applied Information Sciences reviews

4.0

81% would recommend to a friend

(255 total reviews)
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Larry Katzman

95% approve of CEO

80% positive business outlook

Applied Information Sciences has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 255 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Applied Information Sciences employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

255 reviews
2.0
Oct 9, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free snacks and drinks, occasional outings to baseball games. The salary was decent, but the raises are not much even with a good review. Parking expenses are paid for. Really good work, life balance. The location is very nice, right near Reston Town Center and the W&OD Trail by the Metro. Office is nice if you like to live in a cube.

Cons

The organizational structure is not clearly defined or articulated, and management will always have some sort of justification for any concerns. It is very difficult to raise any concerns to management without being deemed a problem child. Everyone in the office keeps to themselves, you can walk past upper management folks for years without them actually knowing who you are. There is no guidance or room for growth, as management is constantly fixated on delivering a "minimum viable product" as quickly as possible despite having not defined what that is. Aside from the chosen couple software engineers, management ignores the input of the development team. Management encourages poor coding practices in order to deliver a minimum viable product in as little time as possible. You will largely be looked down upon by management as just a code monkey. Some in upper management are very snobby, one colleague was told directly that they do not earn enough for their concerns to be valid. Business Analysts frequently spend entire days in meetings, and probably spend most of the work week in meetings. Many Business Analysts claim to have been software developers in order that they can push more rigorous deadlines or squeeze more "stories" into a sprint. They have likely never written any decent software, but will insert themselves into technical meetings and pressure teams to follow their guidance. Working on that laptop is infuriating; I cannot count how many times any given developer was driven to rage because of it. Helpdesk consistently asserts there are driver issues, only to take the laptop and return it with the same exact issue. Ultimately you will stop bothering Helpdesk about it because they offer no solution and you'll end up spending the day trying to fix the garbage laptop. If you want a new laptop, you will have to spend your own money to get a new one. Any effort you put into a project will go unnoticed outside the couple engineers you work with. Management will only meet any input you may have about a project with resistance unless you get one of their favorite engineers to back you up. Best-practice frequently is thrown out the window. You may end up working on the same technologies for a very long time. When the time comes to upgrade, management will likely not want to put the effort into properly updating a solution forcing the team to piecemeal it into a new environment. Because management pushes poorly engineered minimum viable products, a lot of time is spent fixing it. Management either does not understand it takes more effort to fix a poor solution than to put one together right from the start and maintain it, or they like the idea because customers are then stuck paying to have it fixed. Either way it is very discouraging, but any concerns are shrugged off and you will be silenced.

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Applied Information Sciences Response
7y
Thanks so much for the insight. As the company evolves, we're looking to better define/articulate how we structure the organization, how to better provide/receive communication to/from our workforce and ensuring employee morale and our upbeat company culture remains intact. We're in the process of rolling out competencies to provide standardized guidance for career paths and are making strides to ensure we increase communication across the board and throughout all levels within the firm. We pride ourselves in being a people-oriented environment and we're sorry you did not have a good experience.
2.0
Jul 1, 2017

Honest

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Food and beer in the office. Random team events are fun. Flexible work schedule. Employees are nice and fun.

Cons

Lay offs are becoming common. The new leadership team is not good at all. They have a hard time seeing the full picture and being inclusive. The company is going through some major client problems. If you want stability or understanding from management, this is not the place for you.

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Applied Information Sciences Response
8y
Thanks so much for your review and your appreciation for our work hard, play hard culture. As a company we want to ensure that we provide our employees with an engaging environment, a solid corporate culture and long term stability, as our people are our greatest asset. Like all professional services firms, the changing demands and needs of our clients impact the size and skillset of our workforce and at times, creates the need to make adjustments. Considering the dynamics within the industry, we are proud to have deeply minimized the impact on our workforce as the market shifts compared to that of our competitors, but realize that is of little comfort to anyone directly affected by even the slightest reduction.
3.0
Mar 20, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Intelligent staff. Good Practices. Excellent pay and benefits. New Technology. I had a great time. Contributed greatly to the company, and the company treated me well as long as there was a project. I was lucky enough to be put on a good project (at first).

Cons

Everyone knew work became scarce. I usually received around a 5/5 star review, when AIS lost their biggest client and work dried up, I was no longer treated well, was pushed and shuffled around, denied a raise and had a tough time claiming a well deserved bonus. I received a fabricated 1/5 review, and was terminated.

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Applied Information Sciences Response
11y
Thanks for your feedback. As a former employee, you can certainly understand the nuances of resource management, providing opportunity and growing by winning new work. This is always difficult, but challenges can certainly be exacerbated with economic ebbs and flows. Thanks for your service, We will continue to make changes to our internal processes to ensure AIS remains an excellent place to work.
Viewing 7 - 9 of 255 Reviews

Glassdoor has 265 Applied Information Sciences reviews submitted anonymously by Applied Information Sciences employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Applied Information Sciences is right for you.