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Solar Turbines

Part of Caterpillar

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Uncertainty with new arrival of new Caterpillar CEO - Design Engineer Solar Turbines Employee Review

2.0
Oct 26, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Complying with CAT policy is number one in moving up the organization. They are partnered with universities also so you can pay your way up via degrees. If you are an extrovert very easy to waste lots of time but if you’re an introvert very hard to cope with the tedium of the work. Work life balance can be better than some companies. A lot of employees go out of their way to make the job better. Ways the company should be doing like providing training or free food. Lower levels of management do care about survey results and may try to improve things in employee experience where they can. Upper management does not care at all. Even as a new employee there is potential to be highly involved in changing the processes of the company but that is also because things are disorganized. Full return to office has only served to make everything more disorganized due to more in person collaboration and less documentation which has hurt processes further. Most morale boosts involve free food or social rewards like taco days or ice cream parties or free merchandise recognition. Compensation and benefits can be better than industry standard.

Cons

I’m giving it 2 stars based on worse office attendance policy than industry standard. Mobility is challenging below manager level. You either have to carve your own niche or get a select few customer or manager facing rules in your department. It is very rare to see lateral mobility in middle roles. Most of it is at new grad or management roles. Uncertainty on where new CEO is headed in terms of AI, outsourcing, and layoffs. Return to Office policy was definitely used as a soft layoff. I saw it happen. Potential and worry of tighter control from management as means to increase attrition further. Employee input is not valued by management. Employee is expected to implement things managers way even to the detriment of the product and employee growth. Management does not seem passionate about engineering work. Management seems focused on “control”. At times engineering is done for the sake of engineering regardless of customer benefit just for performative labor. Lots of this could have been an email or teams message meetings. I gave diversity and inclusion a 2 because they have walked back many of the discussion due to Trump. Are there with issues with DEI? Sure. But you have to discuss it and keep working at and talk about it you don’t just get rid of it.

Explore other reviews about Solar Turbines

5.0
Jul 2, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great Culture, Good people, good experience

Cons

Any manufacturing place will have the typical downsides

3.0
Jun 22, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Strong benefits package: Holiday shutdown, competitive perks, and the advantages that come with being part of a large, well‑resourced company. - Paid parental leave (new): 16 weeks of paid leave, which is better than many companies in the industry. - Good healthcare options: Solid medical, dental, and vision coverage at a reasonable cost. - Annual bonus structure: Predictable and appreciated yearly bonuses. - Beautiful office + great people: The day‑to‑day coworkers are talented, fun, and genuinely supportive

Cons

- Extremely corporate culture: The company feels increasingly focused on pleasing shareholders and the board rather than supporting employees. - Loss of autonomy + heavy oversight: What used to feel like an independent, empowered environment now feels like “Caterpillar 2.0.” Badge tracking, VPN monitoring, and manager “hit lists” create a sense of surveillance. - DEI rollback: Programs that once had meaning have been stripped down to generic, checkbox versions. - ERGs restricted: Employee resource groups used to be vibrant and employee‑led; now they feel controlled, sanitized, and performative. - Rigid return‑to‑office policy: Leadership advertises “flexibility,” but employees are told that not being in the office 5 days a week, 8 hours a day will negatively impact performance evaluations - Slow, approval‑heavy processes: Even simple decisions require layers of approval, which slows down work and kills creativity. - Double standards: Senior leadership enjoys freedom and exceptions while rank‑and‑file employees are monitored like children. - Structure: People are encouraged to move around to get experience. While this may be a good thing for some people it essentially means you don't get rewarded by being a subject matter expert - you get stuck at the same salary grade for your entire career. It also means managers are frequently in a "step" position so they don't have the time or care to learn their actual job.

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