It is changing - Management Analog Devices Employee Review

3.0
Sep 12, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Overall, a good place to work.

Cons

Senior management only interested in Wall Street, and not interested in supporting innovation and organic growth. Growth is obtained by M/A. Human Resources is not trustworthy for the employee, and do little to help the business. The SLT is clueless on the workings of the company. Re-organizations happen too often. Senior management not interested in the right things to do, only interested in what looks good to others. The company did well in 2010 when it had adequate inventory to fuel a ramp in business and took business away from TI, not, the CFO limited inventory to a point where TI is now able to deliver, ADI cannot - all due to pleasing Wall Street rather than making logical business decisions. It used to be an engineering company, but now is a company run by sales and HR, who know little about running a manufacturing company. The manufacturing organization continues to send manufacturing offshore to places that are not stable, rather then invest in their domestic locations in spite of the fact that the US economy is suffering because it has lots domestic manufacturing of IC's - they still are continuing to let their domestic manufacturing facilities rot rather than upgrade them for the future. The foundries have become the business for ADI, and ADI will pay for that shift to foundry manufacturing. It is no longer the people company that Ray Stata founded. ADI has lost the formula for success. It is very sad to see.

Explore other reviews about Analog Devices

5.0
Jul 6, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great company to work for w good benefits

Cons

Salary was lower than industry average

2.0
Jun 24, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

PTO 401K 6 days of sick time Cafeteria is cheap

Cons

You will not be able to actually use your PTO if you are an operator. Only 1 person is allowed to be on vacation if you have 19 or less people in your department. With that rule, you will have to just roll over some of your PTO and the rest you will lose so you might get to take off a few random days throughout the year. We work on average 14 days per month, and get around 22 days PTO. You do the math for (12*14)/22 to see how many people actually get to use their PTO. They will tell you during onboarding that there are ample opportunities to move up. This is not actually true. They recently stopped doing that. You can only get a better position if you get hired on at that position. Outside hires are the only people being hired for higher positions. The reason is that they were losing operators to these better positions because they treat you poorly when you're an operator. Unfortunately the turn over rate negates anyone they clutch onto anyway due to their inability to be kind or respectful. There are multiple men here who have had sexual harassment complaints from women. When management decides to take them seriously, they will move the woman to a different department or an entirely different shift, while the man is allowed to stay where he is. Supervisors will yell at people and make them cry. Their bosses do not care as this helps with their bottom line in their mind. Good people leave and good people stay. There is no reward for being kind. There is no reward for being a good worker. Raises and promotions are entirely dependent upon if your supervisor and their boss like you, or if you have a family member that works in a higher position here. Experience isn't necessary. Whether you have 2 years or 15 years of experience, you will be hired on as an operator 2 at best, unless you're getting hired on for a management position. They will watch you if they think you go to the bathroom more than a few times per day. They will time your bathroom usage. If you are a new mother or anyone with a medical issue, they will say they will accommodate. Then, they will watch you like a hawk. Took 12 minutes to pump milk? You're lazy. Need an extra break to use your insulin? You're being disrespectful to your team and inconsiderate of their time because your tool was ideal for a moment. Someone here had a medical condition where they had a hole in their esophagus and as such needed extra time to take meds, clean their port etc. and management refused to let them do so and in fact harassed them for sitting down when they medically required extra breaks and notified them when hired. People are deeply unhappy here. If you happen to get hired on, you will be taken on a tour of the fab. Look at the people around you as you go through. Look at their eyes and ask yourself if there's anyone with light still behind their eyes. Look at the way the older people move, who have been here for over a decade, and ask yourself if it's worth it to look like that yourself if you choose to stay. They will use up your youth and vigor and then complain when you keel over or go on medical leave to get your hip replaced or get knee surgery because all the cartilage has been worn away like so many stones in a river after an eon.

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