More Stability Elsewhere - Anonymous employee Autodesk Employee Review

2.0
Jun 7, 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

ESPP is really quite generous. You can't lose, and it's set up for pretty generous returns regardless of what the stock does. 6-week sabbatical after four years, but... (see Cons) Involvement in digital manufacturing, AEC, and media and entertainment means that you see a lot of really cool stuff that they have going on, between the offices, conferences, gallery, etc. and it is exciting to be a part of this...for as long as they let you be a part of it.

Cons

Constant restructuring restructuring and layoffs to the tune of 10-15% of the workforce every couple of years. In between, they're still having smaller scale layoffs that don't make the news. Regularly removing products (including valuable, robust products) from their portfolio. If you're recruited and hired to support a specific product or product's capability, there's no guarantee that the product will still be around six months from your hire date. This has the following results 1) Very angry customers 2) The experience and expertise you bring to the table is no longer needed. Even if you're flexible and a quick learning, there's a significant difference between 20 years of experience in a certain application that's suddenly no longer offered and 6 months experience in what's left. Constantly chasing the leading edge du jour with no real strategic focus, resulting in the aforementioned Cons regarding restructuring and software retirement. By constantly shifting gears trying to chase the latest innovation, they paradoxically become less innovative. Vacation isn't great: 12 days per year, which never increases with seniority. If you add that to the sabbatical, the vacation days per year really aren't all that competitive with companies that offer three or especially four weeks per year with no sabbatical They won't tell you about this during the recruiting phase, but they often have a 1 week furlough around July 4 that requires you to use your vacation days or take unpaid time off during that time. If you're stuck in a mid-career rut and looking to grow your career in a different direction, this is not the place to do it. Stay in your rut until you find something more stable and reliable than Autodesk.

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Autodesk Response
6y
Thank you for sharing your feedback. Though reorganizations and changes are inevitable in our industry, we recognize that some of these changes impact our employees. If a company decision impacts an employee, industry-leading help and services are provided to employees free of charge to help them transition. As for vacation time, Autodesk revised our time-off policy to include discretionary time off (DTO) in place of vacation time. DTO allows exempt employees more flexibility to take time away for leisure as there is no fixed limit.

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5.0
Jun 1, 2026
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Pros

Good WLB Low Turnover Rates Interesting Projects/Work Full Benefits + 401k

Cons

Medium Pay, Not Amazing Stock Packages

2.0
Jun 12, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The individual contributors, your peers you work with day in and day out are fantastic people! At the IC level, for the most part, it feels like everyone is in the fight together. The work/life balance is good depending on which business unit/team you're aligned with. The benefits are pretty solid, especially the 6 week sabbatical.

Cons

Autodesk moves at the pace of a snail, very slow to take action on anything. Selling is very difficult with all the undocumented approvals, processes, red tape and very few people are willing to actually help! Leadership doesn't care about the people their decisions impact. Feedback is rarely listened to and acted upon. Pay is terrible compared to competitors in this space. Autodesk has embraced a ton of change over the last few years with new marketing, sales and IT leadership and it shows. They are not shy in showing their desire to be the next Oracle at the expense of their people. They are constantly changing tools, processes, people, roles, you name it so you feel like you're under water constantly. Lipstick on a pig.

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