GE Aerospace reviews

4.1

84% would recommend to a friend

(3,398 total reviews)
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Larry Culp

93% approve of CEO

81% positive business outlook

GE Aerospace has an employee rating of 4.1 out of 5 stars, based on 3,398 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The GE Aerospace employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Aerospace & Defense industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

3K reviews
1.0
Sep 24, 2023

Waste of time

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Worst experience of my aviation career. I can't think of a single pro

Cons

OK first thing I'm sure it's been said before but this place was an absolute terrible place to work for a number of reasons. 1. So the team you are picked to be on mine was venom 🤔 they treat you like absolute garbage for 3 months. 2. They tell you that you have to self report what they call quality when it's not but won't say when they miss something unless it causes damage or money. So it's a do as I say not as I do. 3. Put blame on you even though they don't follow company policies like showing up 3 hours working and never checking out the tools and blast you for coming to that stage and start working knowing the tools should have been checked out but were not. Then others making a mess and then putting it on you because why not. I have never worked in a place in 14 years of aviation that was as shady and backwards then GE in Lafayette. I wouldn't recommend this place to Stalin if he came back from the dead. Also you have to join a committee of various sorts so you can waste time doing things that has nothing to do with building engines and wonder why they are behind. The amount of extra garbage you have to do that has nothing to do with your job is astronomical. They don't pay nearly enough to put up with the attitudes of these people. It's honestly like a cult. This place has a terrible retention rate for good reason. Oh and don't ask questions even though you are told to or team members like Anthony Gobles will blast you for not knowing something even if you haven't been through the training. Little man syndrome. Very few on that particular team were good people. The rest were just pathetic humans that reminded you of the snobs in high-school. Majority never have touched an aircraft or troubled shot any real system but want to act high and mighty. It was a very expensive lesson to learn that this was a terrible place to work. Quit and went back to actual aviation with a pay bump to start and better people and better environment. Glad I decided to leave because it turns you into a hateful person real fast.

2.0
Jun 2, 2017

Lost at Sea

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good co-workers to work with on projects.

Cons

The best people are bailing and its getting worse. What does that mean? Not enough projects to go around. Constant re-org churn. Place is shrinking and future is not looking bright.

2.0
Mar 31, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- jet engines are probably one of the more exciting products to work on as an engineer - get to work with extremely cutting edge technology - access to some of the best technical experts in the world makes this a great place to learn and develop engineering skills and knowledge - good training opportunities for both technical and leadership skills - always good to work for the top dog in the industry

Cons

- poor work-life balance. The company operates extremely lean, so each person has much more work than they can possibly accomplish on time. Everyone is aware of this, but nothing is done to change it. You need to be able to deal with the stress that every time you finish one urgent project, there's constantly a list of others that are now late because you've focused on something else...can feel like you're constantly putting out fires. - engineers are treated as a commodity and leadership generally ignores the input and feedback from individual contributors. - poor healthcare benefits. employees responsible for a large portion of the costs. - below average pay for the industry. Company is very open about how it sets pay which is good, except for the fact that their goal is to pay everyone no better than the industry median, and most are paid slightly below the median. For an industry leading company hiring top talent....this is a joke. They rely on employees wanting the opportunity to work on top technology at the expense of their pay, benefits, and work life balance. - it's an enormous company so there's the typical problems that come with that...extremely political work environment, leadership distant and out of touch with individual contributors, enormous amounts of corporate koolaid, etc. - fairly good opportunities to move laterally, but if you want to advance vertically, you will realize that in such a huge company, the people that advance A) may not be deserving but are connected to the right people and B) put their career as the top priority in their life and are willing to sacrifice everything in their personal life for the company. - global engineers do a HUGE portion of the engineering work now because the company can pay them much less. As a result, engineers in the US are doing less and less actual engineering work, and spending a lot of time managing global engineers. GE is not an American company; it is a global company and it is transferring huge amounts of technical expertise, manufacturing, etc. overseas. - Cincinnati isn't the most exciting place to be. Downtown has been improving lately, but it has a long way to go. In general, employees just seem unhappy and over-worked. When I talk to people who have been there 10+ years, or who have worked elsewhere, most of them seem to only stay with the company because there's something else keeping them in the area (family, kids, etc.). That doesn't give you a rosy feeling looking into the future, and as a result the company has had a high attrition rate with young employees getting out before they set down any roots.

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