I was happy to get a job at Sling TV but overjoyed to leave - Anonymous employee DISH Employee Review

2.0
Dec 26, 2019
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Because the turnover is so high, there are opportunities to move up at Sling TV.

Cons

There are a lot of red flags at Sling TV/DISH. 1. Employee turnover is very high which should be a red flag to anybody. It meant that the staff wasn't able to grow and flourish in their careers at the organization. The petty rules and top down command and control structure made it very difficult to grow your own career. 2. The "Because Charlie Says So" attitude pervades the building. Instead of hiring smart people and letting them drive towards success, the Marketing team was getting re-oriented from the top with brand new goals constantly. The impact was that features would reach the website and customers without being fully developed. So much tech debt was being built up for that reason. And as a staff member I hated how i was always chasing new problems without actually solving the ones we just were working on. Nothing was done right the first time. 3. Having to be on a literal time clock (to be inside of the turnstiles before 9am ) was a mental drain. It was very common to sit around complaining to your coworkers about how a slow/sick kids or a storm or traffic caused you to be late or almost late... and anxiety levels would spike. One method of coping was to just turn around a go home and take a day off instead of coming to the office at 9:05. You tell me, which is worse: an employee who comes in 10 min past 9am, or one that doesn't come in at all. Or how about this, you arrive at work at 8:45am but spend 11 minutes looking for parking and you literally run to the front door to make it in by 9am. And then... go to you desk and fume and do no work to stick it to the man. The rules around being in the office at certain times breed anger and resentment. 4. Health Insurance deductibles for 2 people I recall was about $5k. And then after paying all of that to the doctors offices, you still end up paying about 20% of bills afterwards. So if you have any sick people in your family, this is a quick way to end up with very little disposable income, or even go further into debt, which is what I did while working at Sling. 5. Engineering on Sling is done in another state by another company. This really made the job tough. Any engineering/product work needed to go though the Product team at Sling and then into the intake process at the offices in American Fork. This was so very annoying because there was not alignment across the two teams. Trying to get any new features built to help users or the internal tools was like pulling teeth.

Explore other reviews about DISH

5.0
Jul 15, 2025
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CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good team environment to work.

Cons

Work type was onsite 5 days.

avatar
DISH Response
11mo
We're thrilled to hear you enjoyed the team environment! We truly value collaboration and a supportive atmosphere. We understand that 5-day onsite work might not be ideal for everyone. We're always evaluating our work models to find the best balance for our teams and business needs. Thanks for your feedback!
3.0
May 15, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good middle management and compensation. Lots of opportunities to learn from plenty of smart people.

Cons

Disclaimer -This is all water cooler hearsay and opinion. During the two years I was there the bill came due on being penny wise and dollar dumb over the years. A great example is Sling. Dish beat basically everyone to market but Netflix with streaming and was the first platform to offer live TV via stream (which YouTube TV still uses as a selling point). What happened? Dish paid the original engineers to build it and then balked at paying them to document and maintain it. Same deal with the cyber security team. After years of expecting security engineers to do exceptional work shorthanded for middling compensation eventually they had none. It was all put on the security manager, who had a heart attack after repeatedly requesting support. He understandably did not return. Not much later one of the core systems was ransomed, and the company fell out of the fortune 500. Despite being in the middle of dealing with the consequences of those decisions leadership was doing it all again with the mobile network build out.

1
avatar
DISH Response
1mo
Hearing that you found value in our middle management and compensation, as well as the chance to learn from the talented individuals on our teams, is encouraging. We appreciate you recognizing those aspects of your time with us. On the other hand, the historical context and concerns you shared regarding executive decision-making, infrastructure maintenance, and resource allocation are deeply concerning. Maintaining a stable, secure, and well-supported environment for our workforce is of the utmost importance, and we take feedback regarding employee well-being and operational decisions seriously. We are continually working to strengthen our operations and better support our teams across all business units. Because this review references a sensitive medical situation alongside organizational challenges, we would welcome the opportunity to hear more about your perspective. Please consider reaching out to our team directly at peopleoperations@dish.com so we can learn more.
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