Intuit reviews

4.2

82% would recommend to a friend

(11,759 total reviews)
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Sasan Goodarzi

78% approve of CEO

77% positive business outlook

Intuit has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 11,759 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Intuit employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

12K reviews
5.0
Jan 7, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing benefits. Hybrid schedule is great, right now only 2 days a week. My teammates work together to deliver at a fast pace, high quality, high efficiency. The interview process was thorough but the challenges were appropriate. It's the type of engineering org that cares about really evaluating you overall - it's true you aren't actually expected to complete the problems so long as you can express that you have a command of this domain. At least on my team, there is a lot of tribal knowledge that flows around, and we're expected to be able to just move fwd with our tasks given some level of ambiguity - this is actually something I prefer because it's something I want to just become better at. Trying to become as good as my teammates is really motivating for me.

Cons

I'm only about 3 months in and I've yet to encounter a con.

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Intuit Response
1y
It’s great to hear your feedback and we’re happy that you’ve been enjoying your time with us so far! Our comprehensive benefits are something we pride ourselves on and we’re glad to hear your appreciation for them as well. It’s also nice to hear about the collaboration on your team. We really do believe in our core values and that we are Stronger Together. Thank you again for taking the time to leave us a review!
1.0
Oct 16, 2024

Read this full review if you are a person of color

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

None of the benefits at Intuit make up for what I experienced below.

Cons

If you are a person of color make sure you read this review fully to understand the dynamics you’re dealing with here. Initially, I was super excited to join my team. From outward appearances and all Intuit’s promoting around its DEI efforts, it seemed like a great place for minorities and people of color. So, I didn’t give it a second thought when I joined this team. As time went on, I became increasingly uncomfortable as the only person of color on the editorial side of this team. I experienced repeated microagressions from certain white team members, and didn’t feel like I could make any complaints for fear of losing my job. There were so many cringe-worthy moments I witnessed, like tone-deaf editorial decisions made around Black History Month without a single black person in the room, along with white colleagues butchering the ethnic names of our customers on conference calls with them and in our cultural marketing moments. When I began to speak up about these things, I experienced repeated bullying from this same group of white team members. They left me out of important meetings and team award submissions, and seemed to think it was funny to remove me from slack channels and software accounts pertaining to the projects I was working on. When I would push back about some of the racially tone-deaf editorial, they would go to my boss and say I was being uncooperative. Eventually, HR was brought in to address the toxic dynamic on this team, and I asked them to move me off the team, which they did. Once I moved teams, things were much better (world of difference working on a team with other minorities). However, my former boss seemed to think I was responsible for the issues on my former team. He blamed me for them in my year-end review along with giving me a DNME, which left me out of getting a bonus or stock award on the projects I worked so hard on all year. It was a real slap in the face to be denied fair compensation + bonus for my contribution to these multicultural campaigns, being the only person of color on this team working on them. And even more disheartening that my boss failed to see the impact of having a minority work on them at all, while rewarding the bullies for their behavior with bonuses and stock. I filed an appeal with HR regarding my review and year-end comp, and they still did not correct this even though I submitted my project trackers and notes showing what was completed prior to moving teams. My former boss seemed to say I didn’t complete projects – those were projects that the other team members were managing, yet none them were denied their bonus or received a DNME. I can’t help but notice that even though I submitted substantial documentation proving otherwise, the words of white male manger were taken at face value over the factual evidence I sent in. Once you see the level of institutionalized white privilege at Intuit, you can’t unsee it. It’s in your best interest to keep diligent records of your projects, progress and meeting notes with your boss particularly if you’re a minority or person of color. I’d hate to see someone exploited and denied compensation the way I was. Please take steps to protect yourselves, and if you find yourself the only person of color in an editorial capacity, you might want to reconsider taking the job at all. Intuit is not a safe place for minorities.

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Intuit Response
1y
Intuit has a strong commitment to diversity, and it is a core part of our values. We also do not allow bullying or retaliation. We would like to talk with you more about your experience if you are open to it, including what happened after you changed managers. Please reach out to me at Scott_Abraham@intuit.com so I can follow up with you personally. Scott Abraham Director, Ethics & Investigations
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