Lowest pay in industry. Low PTO - Applications Engineer Cognex Employee Review

3.0
Oct 30, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good direct management on smaller teams

Cons

The executive suite shows a clear lack of empathy. Employees are being squeezed with lower PTO rollover amounts, a low starting PTO, and no realistic path to increase it. Compounding this, pay across all fields is well below industry standards—in fact, insulting for the Boston area—yet the company wonders why turnover is high. Each year, they spend hundreds of thousands of dollars training new employees, which is a predictable outcome of underpaying staff. To add insult to injury, the company recently shifted from a personal expense system for travel to a corporate credit card, eliminating employees’ ability to earn cashback points. As costs of living rise and work becomes more challenging, this approach demonstrates how little the company values its employees, all while expecting staff to buy into their corporate culture.

Explore other reviews about Cognex

5.0
Jun 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits and awesome culture

Cons

Work very hard sometimes and it can be a bit much

2.0
Jun 29, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Talented and dedicated employees who genuinely care about the products and customers. Interesting technology and strong positions in several markets. Financially stable company with significant resources and the ability to invest for the long term.

Cons

The company still benefits from the reputation built during earlier periods of innovation, but there is a growing sense that preserving that reputation has become more important than adapting to current realities. Many employees want to improve processes, modernize how work gets done, and challenge long-standing assumptions, but meaningful change often struggles against an entrenched preference for maintaining the status quo. There is also a noticeable disconnect between messaging and action. The company talks extensively about culture, inclusion, and employee experience, but employees may find that these priorities become much quieter when external conditions change. Leadership and advancement opportunities can feel concentrated within long-established networks, leading to the perception of a persistent "inner circle" culture. Transparency is another challenge. Important business decisions and strategic shifts are often communicated incompletely or after the fact. Employees are frequently asked to absorb the impact of cost-cutting measures, limited raises, and repeated efficiency initiatives despite the company having substantial resources and continuing to emphasize profitability and margin performance. The result is a growing feeling that employees are carrying the burden of correcting strategic decisions made much higher in the organization. Many of the pressures facing employees feel financial and narrative-driven rather than operationally necessary. The company still has talented people, strong products, and the resources to remain a leader. The concern from many employees is not whether the business can succeed, but whether leadership is willing to invest in the people and organizational changes necessary to maintain that leadership position.

1
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All