Great Employer Overall - PCD IT Engineer Shell Employee Review

4.0
Aug 29, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Shell has a wonderful and extensive set of benefits. Additionally, Shell pays out good and fair salaries as well as incentivized performance bonuses and service recognition awards. Finally, Shell places a respectable focus on career development and employee well being.

Cons

Reorganizations, open resourcing and footprinting activities may seem a bit too frequent. Due to the management structure and corporate culture, one may at times feel that too much emphasis is placed on bending over backwards to perform inconsequential tasks and to drop much more meaningful tasks in order to do so. Typically this will be a simple mandate from above which leads to each subordinate level of management scrambling simply in order to please their superiors. There is also a tendency within Shell for various types of meetings to be presented as optional but for which management will deem "strongly suggested." Management seems mold words to their agendas as these strongly suggested meetings are optional on paper but in attitude are quite mandatory. Mandatory meetings are not a problem but honesty and decency demands that you call them such.

Explore other reviews about Shell

5.0
May 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Shell is a wonderful company to work for. They truly support your continued development and many employees have been here for 20+ years. The work culture is one that provides a feeling of true psychological safety.

Cons

There are lots of meetings.

4.0
Jun 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Early career engineers are given significant ownership and exposure to complex operational challenges. Strong focus on safety, technical development, and collaboration across disciplines. Opportunities to work on high-impact projects, interact with senior leadership, and contribute to decisions affecting major assets and infrastructure.

Cons

Workloads can be demanding, and priorities can shift quickly based on operational needs. Decision-making processes can be slow due to organizational complexity, and geographic mobility may be necessary for certain career opportunities.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All