EchoStar reviews

3.0

41% would recommend to a friend

(568 total reviews)
avatar

Charlie Ergen

28% approve of CEO

40% positive business outlook

EchoStar has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 568 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The EchoStar employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Telecommunications industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

568 reviews
2.0
Jun 19, 2012

stay away

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

outdated company trying to reinvent itself. opportunity for growth

Cons

too many former employees ( employees that got rich, left, couldnt cut it, and came back) put in to high ranking positions.

2.0
Jun 15, 2012

Good place to gain experience and earn a paycheck

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Steady income and interesting work.

Cons

Job-knowledge aside, unless you are willing to 'play the game,' you will remain at the bottom of the barrel. Pay is based on a cost-of-living analysis that hasn't been adjusted in what must be 20 years. Promotion from within is extremely rare, don't expect too much advancement in any reasonable time from where you start. Don't expect real pay raises or much time off either. Health benefits are there only to be laughed at. This company is your typical 'those at the top get the credit/money/recognition while those that do the everyday work get nothing.'

2.0
May 15, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great exposure and education for satellite communications and video delivery technology/service operator markets worldwide. A company that takes calculated risks, makes bold moves and is not timid about upsetting industry status quo - always something new to learn. Great people who are mostly eager to share and mentor. Very high job security but for the wrong reasons.

Cons

The dysfunction of executive/upper management eventually pushes out the talent. Top-down communication is abysmal. Project direction is sporadic at best and you can count on pouring yourself into initiatives only to have them either cancelled or mismanaged at launch due to lack of management experience for market-facing programs. EchoStar does not yet know what it wants to be when it grows up. Top and senior executives all come from DISH, follow old-school management styles of “need to know” basis and do not even communicate well with each other due to the extremely siloed reporting structure with different presidents giving different orders concerning projects that cross divisions. Middle management spends their time trying to figure it out and hoping for top-down direction that does not materialize. EchoStar is not a high-performance company, so high-performing employees go above and beyond to make up for the dead-weight employees and managers, at same or usually lower salaries. High-performing employees are not usually recognized for these efforts, are not promoted, and EchoStar refuses to move or dismiss incompetent managers. Due to these facts, the salaries are some of the lowest in the industry. But if you want complacency and the ability to get by under the radar, unable to get fired or laid off unless you do something illegal that impacts the company, EchoStar is a mecca. If EchoStar were serious about being a global leader (as it claims), the board of directors would have mandated a management overhaul a long time ago. But the board has one major shareholder to please, and employee issues are not his top concern by a long shot. Balance sheet only.

Viewing 505 - 507 of 568 Reviews

Glassdoor has 624 EchoStar reviews submitted anonymously by EchoStar employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if EchoStar is right for you.