MathWorks reviews

4.3

88% would recommend to a friend

(2,558 total reviews)
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Jack Little

94% approve of CEO

86% positive business outlook

MathWorks has an employee rating of 4.3 out of 5 stars, based on 2,558 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The MathWorks 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

3K reviews
2.0
Jul 21, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Relaxed. Free Wed. breakfast. Free Friday cookie. Lots of perks.

Cons

The company still has the mind set of a small company (< 500, in mid nineties) and has a hard time growing into the culture of a mid size company (>3200 in 2015). Middle-management is very slow in motivating engineers or giving them opportunities for growth. This is mostly because there is no competitors (except for open-source, the biggest enemy of MathWorks). You get a cozy job with no opportunities for growth. You may work here for a long time and never get promoted because"you're compared against others", a nonsensical alibi given by managers who in most cases are not technical at all!

3.0
Jun 7, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

NOTE: This review is for the application support engineering role ONLY and does not reflect the rest of the company or other departments. Pros would include: - A safe haven for foreign nationals looking for a long term career path and eventual citizenship in the US. They will do all the immigration paper work for you. -Many social gathering/events, generally positive work environment -An opportunity to explore other departments within Mathworks and learn the tools

Cons

Your experience in EDG may vary depending on your manager. Some managers are very by-the-book while others are more laid back. - You're no longer an "engineer". Any notion or aspirations you once had of actually designing something cool is kind of thrown out the window. Instead, the focus lately has been transferring people to the "quality engineering" team where you will be doing software testing once you're done with EDG. To maximize the benefits of a future career path, choose your team wisely. However, most look for an easy opportunity to transfer out without any serious thought or consideration while others are much more definitive about what they want (you’ll see senior EDG members who have been here for 3 years or more in this category). If you’re willing to work a little harder and brush up on C++, joining development instead of QE is a better career path (both pay and experience) - The company as a whole is obsessed with quantifiable metrics, more so with the EDG group. Tech support cases take more priority over projects for the sake of customer satisfaction. Example: Didn’t contact a customer for more than 1 business day? Send them an email explaining your progress, even if you have no progress to report. Long weekends are usually followed by putting extra people on tech support for the flood of email cases that comes in. Projects are the key to transferring out of EDG, but the irony is that sometimes tech support over-rules this and you're forced to task-switch. -A member in EDG is expected to "contribute" to the team however the sudden growth of this department head count has led to a deprivation of any sort of needed contribution. This usually leads to people coming up with very niche/useless "EDG-projects" that have little impact on actually helping anyone. Many meetings will be had and usually nothing will come of it. Ideas spawned by managers might turn into a “pilot project” where they may test a new procedure out. Some of these projects are useful and can benefit the team but it has been noted that a large majority of them just haven’t gone anywhere at all and are eventually killed because the idea was not-so-great to begin with. - Process. Oh, and a ton of meetings, many of which can be skipped, especially for more senior members of the team. -Try not to stick around for more than a year and a half in EDG. You’ll eventually have doubts about staying with the company over-all and wanting to do something else – generally, your level of involvement in answering tech support questions will stagnate and you’re encouraged to focus more on career development (picking up projects), however, you’ll still get blind-sided by tasks in contributing to the EDG team.

3.0
Jun 6, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- This is a good place to work if this is your first job out of college (but do not get stuck here!). - Company has a good process to ramp up new hires. - Some of the in-house training opportunities are very good. - It is easy to have a good work/life balance in most teams. - Everybody in development gets nice private offices. - If you pay attention, you will learn software engineering working here. - The company purchases books for everyone. - Work/life balance can be very good. - Facilities are top notch.

Cons

- Pay scale is 10% to 30% below industry average. - Bonus structure is not transparent, below industry average, and rigged to favour upper management positions. - The company hires overqualified people for most positions. - It is hard to develop transferable skills in most positions. - Company is very process-heavy. - Previous work experience, education, or training is not valued; all that matters is MathWorks tenure. - Merit-based career advance is slow to none. - Lots of pushback and passive aggressiveness from company old timers. - The core values taught during orientation are only followed by individual contributors; management follows them or not depending on the circumstances. - Everything gets reinvented in-house many times over. - Too much process: plan on spending about half of your time in meetings. - No telecommuting allowed. - Family members not welcome to many of the company party events; what company organizes parties with dancing and alcohol but does not allow you to bring your significant other?

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