Stay for the benefits, leave bc bureaucracy and outlook - Principal Software Engineer Cox Automotive Employee Review

4.0
Apr 2, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Benefits are stellar, esp health insurance - Big scale and reach for an Atlanta company - Tops in their auto vertical market space - Some extremely talented people here

Cons

- Not their fault, but Trump auto and aluminum tariffs likely to impact the company severely - Recent rounds of layoffs have removed some entrenched management, but the increased emphasis on outsourcing has undercut the "we're a family" narrative and generated mistrust. -The organization is extremely resistant to change—unless you're at the VP level or higher, your entrepreneurial ideas are unlikely to be realized. - A stronghold of long-standing management has created a "good ol' boys club" culture where conformity is often necessary to get ahead. - Major decisions are typically drawn-out, taking anywhere from several months to years. - The company relies heavily on extensive processes, documentation, frequent meetings, and a conservative approach to risk. - There's a vast array of programming languages, coding styles, CI/CD pipelines, and cloud providers in use. While this variety opens specialist roles, it also increases operational team and budget overhead. - The systems architecture team lacks a strong, decisive vision and effective oversight. - Security initiatives continue to impose a multi-year burden on engineering and product teams; despite claims of alignment, these efforts are routinely deferred rather than prioritized. - The WFH attitude is predictably conservative and disappointing. We all did just fine during the pandemic.

Explore other reviews about Cox Automotive

5.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great opportunities to learn the latest tools and technologies

Cons

there was some travel involved and i hate to fly but wasnt too bad

1.0
Jun 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits are good. PTO Day 1.

Cons

No advancement opportunity. They claim they hire internally, but they don't seem to adhere to that. Out of nowhere, hours were cut from 40 hours to 32 for our particular shift due to "business needs". However it seems like we are rarely caught up at the end of the night. The same position on another shift did not lose nearly as many hours. Then, there was a location wide meeting where they bragged about record sales and record profits. Seems pretty insensitive to do in front of employees who lost over 20% of their pay. The manager comes off as completely harsh and rude. When you fill out a survey stating facts, they are met with a dismissive tone followed by, "you know this is not true". Training is non existent. Other underpaid employees have to train you so it's like a game of telephone where the training contains just a little less information or a little more incorrect information each time. Pay for other positions in the organization is below average. When applying for those positions internally, they want to base pay on your current role instead of based on qualifications for the job being offered. There is a pay range listed for jobs, don't expect to get anywhere near the top and you are LUCKY to see the middle of that range. Pay raises are not anywhere near inflation rates, so if you stay more than a year you are losing money.

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